Dear lutenists,

perhaps also "normal"(?) lutenists are intersted in a strangely modern
baroque lute piece:

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: [BAROQUE-LUTE] La Comete by Gallot, modern music from 17th
century...
Date: Mon, 25 Apr 2011 22:13:00 +0300
From: wikla <wi...@cs.helsinki.fi>
To: baroque-l...@cs.dartmouth.edu

Dear baroque lutenists,

a couple of messages: 
1) shameless(?) "self promotion" of a quite not yet ready performance of a
very great and interesting piece
2) suggestion/question of a possible form of that piece

1) 
Today I "tubed" a very intersting piece: La Comete, Chaconne du V. Gallot
(D-Lem ms. II.6.14). It is a chaconne by Jacques Gallot. The piece is
really very modern to be composed in the 17th century. My playing is really
far from perfect - perhaps even more un-clean than normally in my tubings -
but the piece is really unique:
  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kD8cqQqYpts
This is my first try of this great but difficult piece. More versions
perhaps to come, when I learn more? You can find the original tabulature
and also modern notation of the piece in page
http://www.cs.helsinki.fi/u/wikla/mus/11_courseLute/, go to item 24.
Perhaps the piece tells about the C/1680 V1, also called the Great Comet of
1680, Kirch's Comet, and Newton's Comet? See the Wikipedia article in
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Comet_of_1680.

2)
The piece has the following (written sections)
  A(4 bars), B(8 bars), C(8 bars), D(8 bars), E(8 bars), 
  F(8 bars, last 4 repeated= 12 bars), G(12 bars), H(12 bars)

I would think it could/should be played in the following
"12-bar-normalized" way (I do not do it like that in my tubing! perhaps in
the next version?):
  AAA BA CA DA EA F G H AAA
Especially because there are hints of repeating the A at the end of
sections B and H. What do you think? Especially you, who know about dancing
the Chaconne!

All the best,

Arto



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