I'm quite sure that the Kleinknecht, Pfeiffer, as well as the works in Augsburg by Toeschi, Haydn, Locatelli, Giardino, Arne, Seckendorf, Sollnitz, Ruge, Kehl, Steinmetz, and Geminiani, were arrangements for lute by Hagen, Falckenhagen, Kohaut, Durant, or Friederica SofiaWillemina, of existing pieces. As were the Rust and Hasse pieces by others. It seems that the long-necked, fretted, plucked stringed instruments have always been ideosyncratic minefields that "real composers" saw no need the cross. I don't know what the musical equivalent of a goat on a 50 yard lead would be. We've always been a little out of the mainstream...except for the theorbo players. They read "music". and dance around the land mines themselves.

----- Original Message ----- From: "Stephan Olbertz" <stephan.olbe...@web.de>
To: <baroque-lute@cs.dartmouth.edu>
Sent: Thursday, October 28, 2010 5:40 AM
Subject: [BAROQUE-LUTE] non-lutenist composers

Dear all,

which non-lutenist composers with original lute works do we have earlier
than Kleinknecht, Pfeiffer and those guys from the Augsburg MS?


Regards,

Stephan

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