Dear Stuart,

   What did your Portugese friends say when faced with things like the
   following:

      " two Portugese manuscript collections (P-La, 54-XII-177 and
      54-X-371-5) from around 1800 contain 'Escala de Guitarra Ingles' and
      'Receuil D'Ariettas choisies avec accompagnement de Guitarre
   Anglaise'
      respectively.
      The important book by Antonio da Silva Leite (Estudio de
   Guitarra,...
      Oporto 1796) contains much useful information about how the
   Portugese
      took to the instrument.  He says the best guitars came from England,
      the best builder being 'Mr Simpson'  and he goes onto say ..' and in
      this city of Oporto there is Luis Cardoso Soares Sevilhano who today
      loses little in comparison with Simpson'."

   But, like you, I can well understand their nationalisatic reluctance to
   recognise that the wonderful soulful fado music has much to do with
   England......

   regards,

   Martyn
   --- On Fri, 1/2/13, WALSH STUART <s.wa...@ntlworld.com> wrote:

     From: WALSH STUART <s.wa...@ntlworld.com>
     Subject: [LUTE] Re: The English Guitar
     To: al...@signtracks.com
     Cc: "Gary R. Boye" <boy...@appstate.edu>, "'Lute List'"
     <lute@cs.dartmouth.edu>
     Date: Friday, 1 February, 2013, 9:16

   On 01/02/2013 05:40, Alain wrote:
   > I think the English guitar is the instrument that has survived in
   Portugal as one of the fundamental ingredient of traditional fado...
   Alain,
   I'd recommend that don't you suggest that idea to Portuguese people -
   they get very touchy about it! There were some very heated exchanges on
   the old cittern list many years ago.
   Portuguese people (obviously not all of them) see their 'guitarra'
   (looks very like an English guitar but  with fancier watch-key tuners)
   as something completely independent of the English guitar.
   Amongst all the other things that can come into play in discussing
   instruments, nationalistic ones can come in too. Reluctantly I have to
   say that the section in 'The Lute in Europe 2' is, for me anyway, far
   too heavily nationalistic.
   But I'm not Portuguese. But if I was, and if I thought that fado was
   part of my identity and culture and that the guitarra is the essence of
   fado, then I might not want the origins of the guitarra to be the
   English guitar.
   Stuart
   > Anyways, I really just want to congratulate Gary on his phenomenal
   work,
   > Alain
   >
   >
   >
   > On 1/31/2013 5:07 AM, Gary R. Boye wrote:
   >> Dear Bill,
   >>
   >> I think I can (briefly) answer your questions:
   >>
   >> There is a HUGE amount of music that survives for this instrument.
   If you check my web page for the 18th century and do a CTRL-F for
   "english guitar" there are at least 274 publications:
   >>
   >> [1]http://applications.library.appstate.edu/music/lute/C18/1700.html
   >>
   >> More of these sources now labeled "guitar" are probably for this
   instrument as well.
   >>
   >> The quality? It varies . . . it is an amateur instrument and much of
   the music is just an arrangement of a melody--a single line at the end
   of a publication really for piano and voice. But I must admit that the
   piece Rob played and his playing was disarmingly effective; hearing one
   of these instruments always makes me want to play one . . .
   >>
   >> There is a nice sonata by J.C. Bach:
   >>
   >> J.C. Bach c1775
   >> Bach, Johann Christian. A sonata for the guitar with an
   accompaniment for a violin (London, [England]: Longman, Lukey, and Co.)
   [BUC]
   >> English guitar and violin in staff notation
   >>
   >> The second question is easy: to my knowledge, this instrument was
   NEVER called the "English guitar" in the 18th century. Always "guittar"
   or even "guitar" with various other spellings/other names in German and
   French.
   >>
   >> Gary
   >>
   >> On 1/31/2013 5:00 AM, William Samson wrote:
   >>>     (Semi) serious question.  What music was composed for this
   instrument
   >>>     outside Scotland? - Is it any good? (- the music from outside
   Scotland,
   >>>     that is).
   >>>
   >>>     Second question - What did they call this instrument back in
   the day?
   >>>     Specifically, was it ever called "The English Guitar"?
   >>>
   >>>     Bill
   >>>     From: Rob MacKillop <[2]robmackil...@gmail.com>
   >>>     To: Lute <[3]lute@cs.dartmouth.edu>
   >>>     Sent: Thursday, 31 January 2013, 8:50
   >>>     Subject: [LUTE] The English Guitar
   >>>       I'm no fascist, so if you want to discuss the so-called
   English
   >>>     Guitar,
   >>>       I suggest you do so here, not in the thread of my video
   performance
   >>>       (which everyone except Martyn seems to have seen). I only
   ever said
   >>>       don't use my video thread to discuss the wider issues of the
   guittar.
   >>>       My reason for creating a separate thread is that it makes it
   easier
   >>>     for
   >>>       me to avoid. The reason for avoiding the discussion is that
   there are
   >>>     a
   >>>       few regulars here who cannot discuss anything without killing
   the
   >>>       subject for anyone who has a love for it.
   >>>       So, what is an English Guitar?
   >>>       Rob (exits stage left...)
   >>>       --
   >>>     To get on or off this list see list information at
   >>>     [1][4]http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
   >>>
   >>>     --
   >>>
   >>> References
   >>>
   >>>     1. [5]http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
   >>>
   >>
   >
   >
   >
   >

   --

References

   1. http://applications.library.appstate.edu/music/lute/C18/1700.html
   2. http://us.mc817.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=robmackil...@gmail.com
   3. http://us.mc817.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=lute@cs.dartmouth.edu
   4. http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
   5. http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html

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