Thanks to Ron and Howard for your help.
The question is becoming more complicated: as far as I can work out,
Campion published a Traite d'accompagnement (1716) and an Addition
au traite d'accompagnement (1730). I think that the detailed
descriptions of accompanying on theorbo, lute
On Sep 29, 2010, at 1:50 PM, Sam Chapman wrote:
The question is becoming more complicated: as far as I can work out,
Campion published a Traite d'accompagnement (1716) and an Addition
au traite d'accompagnement (1730). I think that the detailed
descriptions of accompanying on theorbo,
And lunched at the Trout pub on the Thames.
dt
Francois.
Thomas Campion was a contemporary of Dowland and Shakespeare. He
died in 1620, and wrote nothing about continuo.
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Hello Sam:
Whoops. I think you are a little confused about your sources. There
is a _Traite d'accompagnement_ by one Francois Campion (1716), and
there is _The Art of Descant, or Composing Musick in Parts_ by Thomas
Campion published by Playford (1674). My guess is that you are
On Sep 28, 2010, at 6:12 AM, Ron Andrico wrote:
There
is a _Traite d'accompagnement_ by one Francois Campion (1716), and
there is _The Art of Descant, or Composing Musick in Parts_ by Thomas
Campion published by Playford (1674). My guess is that you are seeking
the former, which is
On Wed, 2009-08-26 at 16:51 +0200, Matteo Turri wrote:
Thanks! That's the second wonderful link in one week! Not just dowland
and campion facsimiles but also wilson, rosseter etc. etc. Very nice. \
Unfortunately you can only create a pdf of one page and not the whole
book.
Taco
A great resource
Taco,
you can download the whole documents in pdf.
At the moment I cannot access EEBO form my office. I will do it later
from home and explain you the steps.
M.
2009/8/27 Taco Walstra [1]wals...@science.uva.nl
On Wed, 2009-08-26 at 16:51 +0200, Matteo Turri wrote:
On Thu, 2009-08-27 at 09:59 +0200, Matteo Turri wrote:
Taco,
you can download the whole documents in pdf.
At the moment I cannot access EEBO form my office. I will do it later
from home and explain you the steps.
M.
Ah, I figured it out: you select the document and in the marked list
A great resource to retrieve this kind of documents is the EEBO, Early English
Books Online:
http://eebo.chadwyck.com/home
You can only access it via a Library or an Academic Institution, but is should
be pretty easy to register at you local library and gain access to it through
their online
Found!
Thanks to Matteo, Alfonso and everyone else!
Saludos,
a
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ariel abramovich wrote:
Dear friends,
I'm desperately looking for Thomas Campion 4th books, in any digital
format.
I bought all others, but the 4th seems to be a bit of a problem to find.
Any link to some library files?
Thanks in advance!
all best,
ariel.
To get on or off this
At 09:42 AM 11/7/2006, Stewart McCoy wrote:
In Thomas Campion's song, Author of light, there is the line
Sunne and Moone, Starres and underlights I see.
What are underlights? I can't find the word in any of the
dictionaries I have at home.
Hmmm. My first thought was that this is a reference to
Stewart,
Michael Pilkington in his book Campion, Dowland and the Lutenist
Songwriters has: underlights = lights from below, such as volcanoes?
(His question mark!) He refers to Wilfrid Mellers 'Words and Music in
Elizabethan England, The Age of Shakespeare, ed. Boris Fund, Pelican
Guides to
Stewart
I agree with Caroline Usher's interpretation. There is clearly a
hierarchy in terms of perceived size, from Sun (largest), to stars
(smallest). under in Underlights, would then have a similar
function as under in underling.
Anthony
Le 7 nov. 06 =E0 16:55, Caroline Usher a
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