Re: Lute and viol

2004-05-18 Thread Ed Durbrow
Tobias Hume would be a point to start. He says his music (in 
Poeticall Musicke 1605) can be played in 8 different combinations, 
including 2 lutes and basse viole.

>Dear all,
>  I wonder if any of you could provide some info about =
>English pieces for lute and viola da gamba of late XVIth century and =
>early XVIIth.
>Thanks very much.
>Saludos from Sevilla,
>Ariel.
>
>
>
>
>--


-- 
Ed Durbrow
Saitama, Japan
http://www9.plala.or.jp/edurbrow/




baroque guitar + bandura

2004-05-18 Thread Roman Turovsky
Is anyone familiar with instruments by 1785 Rafael Vallego of Granada, such
as seen in Chapter III at
http://polyhymnion.org/torban
???
RT





tid-bits

2004-05-18 Thread Roman Turovsky
Help needed in identification of a triple-swan-neck lute at the bottom of
http://polyhymnion.org/swv/vita.html
Anyone?
RT





Torban Site: Visitor #9

2004-05-18 Thread Roman Turovsky
9.18 May15:41Defense Threat Reduction Agency, United States
Makes my day...
RT

__
Roman M. Turovsky
http://polyhymnion.org/swv





Lute and viol

2004-05-18 Thread Ariel Abramovich
Dear all,
 I wonder if any of you could provide some info about =
English pieces for lute and viola da gamba of late XVIth century and =
early XVIIth.
Thanks very much.
Saludos from Sevilla,
Ariel.




--


Hasenfuss

2004-05-18 Thread Donatella Galletti
Does anybody have snail and /or mail address of Hendrick Hasenfuss? Please
answer off- list

Thanks!

Donatella

http://web.tiscali.it/awebd


__
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Attiva Senza Canone entro il 31 maggio: navighi a 1,5 euro l'ora per i primi
3 mesi,se scegli il modem e' tuo in comodato gratuito e in piu' hai gratis
SuperMail per 12 mesi. Non aspettare, attivala subito!
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liederkreis

2004-05-18 Thread Roman Turovsky
I have a new Schubert/Matthison item (13-course, for those interested) at
http://polyhymnion.org/lieder/lieder.html
RT





Re: Friendly fire, music and cruelty to animals

2004-05-18 Thread Thomas Schall
I got the information about the band from the book. 
Thanks for the correction!

Thomas

Am Die, 2004-05-18 um 18.38 schrieb Howard Posner:

> > How was the band's name whose music one can only bear to listen when
> > being on a different planet?
> 
> Not quite that.  In the interests of accuracy, from Douglas Adams' "The
> Restaurant at the End of the Universe", chapter 17:
> 
> "Disaster Area, a plutonium rock band from the Gagracka Mind Zones, are
> generally held to be not only the loudest rock band in the Galaxy, but in
> fact the loudest noise of any kind at all.  Regular concert goers judge that
> the best sound balance is usually to be heard from within large concrete
> bunkers some 37 miles from the stage, whilst the musicians themselves play
> their instruments by remote control from within a heavily insulated
> spaceship which stays in orbit around the planet -- or more frequently
> around a completely different planet.
> *   *   *
> Many worlds have now banned their act altogether, sometimes for artistic
> reasons, but most commonly because the band's public address system
> contravenes local strategic arms limitations treaties."
> 
> Disaster Area was not in the original BBC radio Hitch-Hiker's Guide to the
> Galaxy.  I suppose it was substituted for the super-evolutionary Hagunenons,
> which would have been too difficult to do on television.

-- 
Thomas Schall
Niederhofheimer Weg 3   
D-65843 Sulzbach
06196/74519
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.lautenist.de / www.tslaute.de/weiss

--


Re: Friendly fire, music and cruelty to animals

2004-05-18 Thread Howard Posner

> How was the band's name whose music one can only bear to listen when
> being on a different planet?

Not quite that.  In the interests of accuracy, from Douglas Adams' "The
Restaurant at the End of the Universe", chapter 17:

"Disaster Area, a plutonium rock band from the Gagracka Mind Zones, are
generally held to be not only the loudest rock band in the Galaxy, but in
fact the loudest noise of any kind at all.  Regular concert goers judge that
the best sound balance is usually to be heard from within large concrete
bunkers some 37 miles from the stage, whilst the musicians themselves play
their instruments by remote control from within a heavily insulated
spaceship which stays in orbit around the planet -- or more frequently
around a completely different planet.
*   *   *
Many worlds have now banned their act altogether, sometimes for artistic
reasons, but most commonly because the band's public address system
contravenes local strategic arms limitations treaties."

Disaster Area was not in the original BBC radio Hitch-Hiker's Guide to the
Galaxy.  I suppose it was substituted for the super-evolutionary Hagunenons,
which would have been too difficult to do on television.




Re: Friendly fire, music and cruelty to animals

2004-05-18 Thread Thomas Schall
How was the band's name whose music one can only bear to listen when
being on a different planet? 

Thomas

Am Die, 2004-05-18 um 17.07 schrieb Alain Veylit:

> Jon,
> Some of the music my daughters listens to sounds much like electrified 
> Vogon poetry ... But they also enjoy the Baltimore consort and the Beatles. 
> So that makes the balance, I guess
> Alain
> 
> At 11:10 PM 5/17/2004, Jon Murphy wrote:
> >Which is worse Alain, volume or Vogon poetry? I would hate to have to learn
> >the answer .
> >
> >Best, Jon
> 

-- 
Thomas Schall
Niederhofheimer Weg 3   
D-65843 Sulzbach
06196/74519
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.lautenist.de / www.tslaute.de/weiss

--


Re: Friendly fire, music and cruelty to animals

2004-05-18 Thread Alain Veylit
Jon,
Some of the music my daughters listens to sounds much like electrified 
Vogon poetry ... But they also enjoy the Baltimore consort and the Beatles. 
So that makes the balance, I guess
Alain

At 11:10 PM 5/17/2004, Jon Murphy wrote:
>Which is worse Alain, volume or Vogon poetry? I would hate to have to learn
>the answer .
>
>Best, Jon





Eugene Onegin

2004-05-18 Thread RichardTomBeck
As a few people have expressed an interest Eugene Onegin, the following link 
might be of use.  

http://www.dedalusbooks.com/catalog.php?id=0167&s=1


Cheers

Tom Beck

--


lute to guitar

2004-05-18 Thread RichardTomBeck
Cheers Jon! Sadly I don't even have a cat, as I'm allergic to their fur. We 
tried, but had to take it back to the cattery after one day, as I came out in 
red spots all over. Best wishes

Tom

--


Re: Not a lot people know that.....

2004-05-18 Thread ferengizâde daniêl shawqy
American IS the equivalent for the rest of the world...
greetings, danyel
  - Original Message -=20
  From: Tony Chalkley=20
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ; Bernd Haegemann=20
  Sent: Friday, May 14, 2004 4:56 PM
  Subject: Re: Not a lot people know that.


  Dear Bernd,
  From: "Bernd Haegemann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

  > P.S. Where did you take the statement from? "The Handbook of
  >  Astrology"?

  Maybe you ought to have explained that for "East-Friesian" French =
people
  should read Belgian, English people should read Irish, Iranians -  =
Qazvinis.
  Maybe someone else can fill us in about what the Belgians, Irish and
  Qazvinis should read, as well as, perhaps the American equivalent.


  Tony



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