I agree with Wikla,

long live variety and strumming.

I was at the Kozena concert in Hamburg, and it was a great experience.
What I liked was, that the instrumentalists had their own pieces and were not
hired mercenaries. And hey, whenever did people outside our
esoteric circle got to hear a colascione solo part?

picking and strumming
 we



Am 12.11.10 21:55, schrieb wikla:
I personally would allow all the flowers blossom. Variety is the strength
of our music. And so it used to be. And so it is also in the music we hear
every day! I wouldn't like - perhaps even wouldn't tolerate - any
"besserwisser" to tell us the _one and only_  "right" way of doing anything
. (Btw: this holds also to one of the very tiniest things in EM, the use of
bourdons in b-guitars' 4th and 5th... ;-)

And long live strumming - not only the "ethnic" one... And up with variety
of variance! :)

Arto


On Fri, 12 Nov 2010 14:29:18 -0500, Bruno Fournier<br...@estavel.org>
wrote:
I personnally am getting tired of all this theatrical way of doing
    baroque music, and the Latin american style of strumming used.A Don't
    get me wrong, I love strumming, but I prefer to hear it in Latin
    american music.....

    A

    Bruno Cognyl-Fournier

    A

    On Fri, Nov 12, 2010 at 2:00 PM, Bernd Haegemann<[1...@symbol4.de>
    wrote:

      Yesterday we watched a very nice concert.
      As it seems it also on youtube:
      [2]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wk4j_WRqd68&feature=related
      then you can continue with the vids on the righ side of the page.
      best wishes
      Bernd
      To get on or off this list see list information at
      [3]http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html

    --

References

    1. mailto:b...@symbol4.de
    2. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wk4j_WRqd68&feature=related
    3. http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html




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