Re: [Hornlist] Michael Haydn Concerto now Old English Poem

2003-12-24 Thread YATESLAWRENCE
In a message dated 24/12/2003 01:06:11 GMT Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: from an anonymous Old English poem Deor and means that passed away: so may this. You can hear it read in Old English at http://www.heorot.dk/deor.html There is, to my English ears, a more evocative

RE: [Hornlist] Michael Haydn Concerto now Old English Poem

2003-12-24 Thread Hans
It is also done with the Knechtel concertos (2), Pokorny etc., but we mostly know just the elaborated text by the editors. == MIchael Haydn: thank you Hans for your reply. This explains the practice of improvising on baroque concerti, but I

RE: [Hornlist] Michael Haydn Concerto now Old English Poem

2003-12-23 Thread Steven Ovitsky
Strange as it may seem now, I took 2 Old English / Middle English Lit courses 35 years ago as an undergrad. The professor was Donald Sands, whose book Middle English Verse Romances (Exeter Medieval English Texts and Studies), is a classic anthology. I pulled a few dusty books off the guest room