Sorry if it is not clear. It is a twelve course instrument. There are five 
courses on the fingerboard and seven unstopped basses.

>From 1st course down the tuning is

e' c' g c B (1-5 on the fingerboard); unstopped courses are F E D C B,(B below 
the bass stave) a g; 6-12 unstopped.

There is a gap  between the courses on the fingerboard and the open basses.

It is the arrangement of the unstopped courses on the instrument which would be 
unusual. The two thinnest strings are placed in the outside position.

What puzzles me is what possible advantage might there be to this.

One thing is certain - either the open basses overlap with the courses on the 
fingerboard or there is a gap between the 5th and 6th courses.

The new arrangement fills in the gap by placing the 11th and 12th courses in 
the upper octave.

As ever.

Monica


> On 12 June 2019 at 12:45 Rob MacKillop <robmackil...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>     Monica,
>
>     To save confusion, please use the standard method of describing courses: 
> the first string is always the first course.
>
>     So, descending from 1st course down to 12th course the tuning you 
> describe appears to be:
>
>     Fretted: e' c' g c B Unfretted: B C D E F a g
>
>     Is that correct? If so, that is highly unusual, so please correct me if 
> I'm wrong.
>
>     Rob MacKillop
>
>
>
>     On Wed, 12 Jun 2019 at 12:07, Monica Hall < mjlh...@cs.dartmouth.edu 
> mailto:mjlh...@cs.dartmouth.edu > wrote:
>
>         ?space?--  The latest issue of Early Music has a short article on the 
> guitarre
   theorbee suggesting an interesting tuning/stringing method different
   from the one suggested by Donald Gill and myself - to witt -

   on the fingerboard - e' c' g c B

   1st - 5th unstopped courses - F E D C B,

   6th-7th unstopped courses - a g

   (nominally in C major - there is a C minor alternative)

   in other words there is a gap of an augmented 4th between the lowest
   note on the fingerboard and the first unstopped course, but this is
   filled in by the 6th and 7th courses which are at the correct pitch but
   out of sequence physically on the instrument rather than re-entrant in
   the strictest sense of the term.

   This certainly produces a better realization of the music - it
   eliminates the skip of a 7th in the bass line.

   I know that the theorbo sometimes had the lowest course or lowest two
   course re-entrant but these are not out of sequence. There is no gap
   between the stopped courses and diapasons.

   Does anyone know of any examples of a theorbo or other instrument where
   there is a gap between the stopped courses and the diapasons?

   What are the advantages to having the diapasons out of sequence like
   this. Are there any practical advantages either when constructing the
   instrument or when playing it? The strings will be of the same guage
   wherever they are positioned on the instrument.

   Food for thought.

   As ever

   Monica


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