I meant -- someone in Renaissance times listening to a performance.

--Sarge

On 8/29/2020 9:44 AM, Mayes, Joseph wrote:
This raises a question as well: Where would one have found this "renaissance 
audience?"
________________________________________
From: lute-...@new-old-mail.cs.dartmouth.edu <lute-...@new-old-mail.cs.dartmouth.edu> 
on behalf of Sarge Gerbode <sa...@gerbode.net>
Sent: Saturday, August 29, 2020 11:52 AM
To: G. C.; Lutelist
Subject: [EXTERNAL] [LUTE] Re: A trivia question

I think this one wins the prize, but I am not sure variations on this
kind should win, as they are a sort of grab bag one could select from
for any particular performance. I think even a Renaissance audience
would be put to sleep by an hour-long set of variations.

So what's the longest non-variation piece?

--Sarge

On 8/29/2020 6:56 AM, G. C. wrote:
Vincenzo Galilei wrote 100 variations over the Romanesca, which would take more
than one hour to perform

     On Sat, Aug 29, 2020 at 2:54 PM G. C. <[1]kalei...@gmail.com> wrote:

       [2]https://www.mail-archive.com/lute@cs.dartmouth.edu/msg24116.html

     --

References

     1. mailto:kalei...@gmail.com
     2. https://www.mail-archive.com/lute@cs.dartmouth.edu/msg24116.html


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