Very interesting Val, details pointing to this being a lute owned by the 
ambassador, and probably played by him, so probably also in playing condition; 
although we can't be sure that the painting gives the exact details.

Regards
Anthony




----- Message d'origine ----
De : Sauvage Valéry <sauvag...@orange.fr>
À : lute@cs.dartmouth.edu
Envoyé le : Mer 9 février 2011, 15h 35min 26s
Objet : [LUTE] TRe: Holbein painting - precision and accuracy



-----Message d'origine-----


Is it possible that this lute, with its string height and particular fret 
setting might have been recognizable as typically French, taking account of 
what 

Val points out. Some of those French dance pieces (dating from  just before the 
painting, see Pierre Attaignant, Paris 1529-30) les  Basses Dances, the 
Branles, 

etc, might have sounded quite good with such a bray  harp buzz. 

------

I guess  this high and important person, ambassador of Francis the 1st to the 
court of England was more playing his King favorit lutenist Alberto di 
Mantova's 
music than popular tunes (Painting is from 1533, coming of Alberto to the 
French 
court in 1528, both could have met, as the ambassador was painted here for his 
installation, so he was newly in England in 1533.
Another point he probably bring his own lute (as said before he his painted 
twice by Holbein with this instrument, and that means probably he was a good 
player, at least a regular one...) is the lute case on the floor under the 
furniture. All guesses...
V.






To get on or off this list see list information at
http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html



      


Reply via email to