Hello Albert,

Thanks, that was very clear. I agree with you.  

Allan Alexander
188 1st St
Troy, NY 12180-4436

> Open letter to Michael Thames
> who announced to place a TREE facsimile edition to the wwweb.
> 
>     from Albert Reyerman, TREE EDITION
> 
> Dear Mr. Thames,
> 
> first of all I  would like to correct you: in the  BACH/Weyrauch
> facsimile edition the copyright notice is printed on the very first
> page (in 24 point Times Roman, big enough not to be overlooked). It
> reads: Copyright 1999, TREE EDITION, Albert Reyerman
> 
> Now to your plan, to place a Bach/Weyrauch facsimile edition on
> the Internet: I have nothing to say against that, as long as you 
place
> YOUR facsimile edition and not MINE.
> 
> To make your own facsimile edition I´ll give you some information:
> fly/drive to Leipzig (from my hometown Leipzig was 400 miles away), 
go
> to Städtische Bibliotheken Leipzig Musikbibliothek Leuschnerplatz
> 10-11 D-04107 Leipzig
> 
> Ask the head of the library (Dr. Brigitte Geyer) for permission
> to make a facsimile of the Bach edition and to publish it.
> If you are of good reputation and experienced in making facsimiles 
of
> sources of such value, she possibly agrees. In my case she did. 
Bring
> your own computer, software and scanner  ( I brought my big AGFA
> T2000XL scanner, cause the original manuscript is so big in size 
that
> it does not fit to an A4 or legal format scanner. The street price 
of
> the Agfa scanner is about 10,000.- US $. Hopefully you have 
something
> good as this).
> 
> Than scan the ms. Cause the ms. has few pages, It will take you
> only about one day or two, if you are an experienced  operator (the
> ms. has light brown ink on a yellowish paper. Difficult to scan). 
At
> home, with your publishing software ( I use Adobe Pagemaker and 
Adobe
> Acrobat Professional) you can layout the book on your PC/Mac system
> and make a proper edition of it.
> 
> You can avoid going to the printer, have the book printed.
> You can avoid, going to the book binder, to have the edition 
binded.
> You can avoid, to make some advertising around the world. You can
> avoid all these things I had to do, cause: you place YOUR facsimile
> edition to the internet.
> 
> But again: place YOURS and not MINE.
> 
> About fairness:
> I know very well that we both are living on different parts of this
> world. But I have been to the United States often enough (about 20
> times or so within the last 25 years) to know that the American 
people
> as well as the European people are exactly aware of the difference
> between YOURS and MINE. No discussion about.
> 
> If I misunderstood you and you are not talking about fairness,
> but on applicable laws: my lawyers on copyright matters are
> 
> Zipse& Habersack
> Dipl. Ing. Joerg Habersack
> Patentanwalt
> Kemnatenstr. 15
> 80687 Munich
> Germany
> 
> They are highly approved and can answer all your questions.
> 
> But I would like to count on your fairness. Thank you in advance.
> Please excuse my poor english.
> 
> Albert
> 
> Albert Reyerman
> TREE EDITION
> Finkenberg 89
> D-23558 Luebeck
> Germany
> 
> TREE EDITION is registered trade mark
> European Patent Register No. 1 038 427
> 
> 
> By the way:
> I drove to Leipzig exactly 40 times in the past 9 years.
> They have 40 lute mss/prints and the gave me only one source at a
> time. (The biggest source was the DLUGORAI lute book. It has 600
> pages. I worked on that book for 4 weeks fulltime). Now I have 
scanned
> all Leipzig lute sources. The 40 facsimiles are not all yet 
published
> in print. But they will be, one after another. I promise.
> 
> Albert
> 
> 
> Michael Thames wrote:
> 
> >  Let me state my intentions, and I will take all viewpoints to 
heart
> >  in =
> >the matter. I would like to put these unedited facsimiles That I
> >bought = from Tree publishing on my website for free downloading, 
as
> >well = transcribe a version for guitar.  Nowhere in the edition 
does
> >it say = anything about copyrights etc.and there is absolutely no
> >editing, just = Xerox copies of the original Tablature, period.
> >      In the Dowland MS manuscript project, ( see link ) they 
state,
> >      =
> >they bought the rights to publish the manuscripts, and now they 
are =
> >public domain, and are free to download.  They got together 25 
people
> >to = chip in and buy the rights. Now, in theory is it not the same
> >thing Tree = did?  They most likely paid money, to get the rights 
to
> >publish and SELL = the facsimiles.  If I bought the Facsimiles for
> >$25,00 could one assume = that I've fulfilled my part to Tree
> >publishing by chipping in and = helping them to obtain rights to 
make
> >these public domain, as well as = assisting them in there ability 
to
> >sell them.  In a way, it seems like = capitalism at it's best and
> >worst. =20
> >    Like many of you I download lots of music,  But I also love to
> >    buy =
> >nice editions, of the very pieces I've downloaded, and will 
continue
> >to = buy nice editions, whenever I come across them.  Last week, I
> >bought the = complete lute works of John Dowland, even though I 
could
> >download 90% of = that for free.  The challenge for publishers, is 
to
> >take this music = which is basically available to all, and arrange 
it
> >in a nice, = informative fingered edition, then, they can make 
some
> >money. Not to = continue to stiff us on unedited facsimiles that
> >require no more skill = and expertise than to press a button on a
> >camera.  I recently = bought...Lessons for the lute, by Anthony
> >Balies & Anne van Royen = because there's a well thought out, 
gradual
> >approach to playing thumb = under, and lots of info. on the pieces
> >etc.  I very much appreciate what = Tree does, don't get me wrong,
> >and will continue to buy their editions, = but on facsimiles?
> >  =20
> >      http://cbsr26.ucr.edu//wlkfiles/Folger/DowlandMS.html
> >Michael Thames
> >Luthier
> >www.ThamesClassicalGuitars.com
> >Site design by Natalina Calia-Thames
> >--
> >
> 
> 
> 



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