The answer is to Forward the reply to the Lute-list.
Ron (UK)
-Original Message-
From: Stewart McCoy [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, December 17, 2007 4:28 PM
To: Lute Net
Subject: [LUTE] List confusion
Dear Taco,
I agree. Doing what you suggest might also help to rid us of
I remember the 60's well enough that I still enjoy listening to that
stuff once in a while.
David R
Hear, hear. IMHO a lot of good tunes came out then. My indicator of a good
tune was if I can whistle it and someone else recognise it, it is a good
tune. How much of today's music can be
I've been looking for an edition of the works of Wolff Jacob
Lauffensteiner, but without success.
Just like a Rolling Stone?
Ron (UK)
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On Tuesday 18 December 2007 05:22, David Rastall rattled on the keyboard:
Hi david,
I think you refer to the austrian edition Musik alter Meister, Akademische
Druck und Verlag Graz, 2 präludien und fünf Partien für Laute with staff and
tab. Don't know if it's still available.
Taco
Dear Wisdom,
You need to go fishing, David. In the World Catalogue I got 15
hits,
but these included guitar arrangements and CDs. There are about
6 editions of
Lauffensteiner's lute music, incl. two facsimile editions. A
major edition is Musik alter Meister, vol. 30, mentioned by
Eugene and others.
For
They were available on the Fronimo site. Both ensemble and solo works.I
haven't checked recently but I think? they were intabulations by Doug Towne?
There is,or was, an Edition of Academische Druck- u.Verlagsanstalt under the
series title Musik Alter Meister (1975 - General Editor Hans Radke) and
Dear Stewart
The trouble is that at least with my email software (Microsoft Entourage),
simply clicking on reply, automatically inserts the address of the person
who posted the message, and does not insert the address of the list. So it
takes a conscious effort to change things round. If, like
This has nothing to do with your Microsoft Entourage. It is a VERY NICE
setting that prevents our innermost unflattering opinions escaping into the
list. The italophone lutelist works the same way, for the same reasons,
based on ample PRECEDENT.
RT
- Original Message -
From: Martin
On Tuesday 18 December 2007 13:30, Roman Turovsky rattled on the keyboard:
This has nothing to do with your Microsoft Entourage. It is a VERY NICE
setting that prevents our innermost unflattering opinions escaping into the
list. The italophone lutelist works the same way, for the same reasons,
On Tuesday 18 December 2007 13:30, Roman Turovsky rattled on the keyboard:
This has nothing to do with your Microsoft Entourage. It is a VERY NICE
setting that prevents our innermost unflattering opinions escaping into
the
list. The italophone lutelist works the same way, for the same
Dear David,
The Lute Society have published some music by Lauffensteiner. A Google
search for Lute Society + Lauffensteiner produced the following:
LAUFFENSTEINER, Wolff Jacob, 1676-1754
Partie in B Flat Major for 11-Course Baroque Lute, Entrée, Courente, Bourée,
Menuet, Guique, Sarabande.
From: Martin Eastwell [EMAIL PROTECTED]
If, like me, you are
careless and forgetful,
This is one of the major issues of humanity, and we all
have to deal with it constantly...
There is a constant traffic of messages on the lute list,
and there is a constant back channel of comments in
Great :-) more info on the net!
not that i need any. now...i just need to find a nice master class :-)
On Dec 17, 2007, at 7:54 PM, Wayne Cripps wrote:
Hi Lute Thumb Freaks!
The majority of what the old ones actually wrote
about the use of the RH thumb can be found here..
A helpful description of the lute found on the Wikipedia Renaissance
music page:
Lute: The lute is simply any plucked instrument without a neck. In
the medieval ages it had 4 or 5 Strings and was considered a much
more dignified instrument that the guitar. It is similar in its
Andrew,
It is hard to read between the tears.
ray
On Dec 18, 2007 11:21 AM, Andrew Gibbs [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
A helpful description of the lute found on the Wikipedia Renaissance
music page:
Lute: The lute is simply any plucked instrument without a neck. In
the medieval ages it had 4 or
Wayne
I must admit acceptation of back channel comments worries me. I
know they exist, but should they be encouraged? I don't think that is
at all what you are saying. You are no doubt just taking them as a
fact of life, one of the major issues of humanity, but just
ackowledging them
Sometimes I hear that the ring finger shares tendons
with its neighbors, so that no level of technique can
achieve perfect indepdence of fingers.
I've never seen a good diagram showing exactly how
this works. For example, I don't know whether the
sharing occurs for the flexor tendons, the
Yes, I agree, it must be preserved! I remember reading a published version of
a child's poem about Spring which included the line:
Birds chirped, frogs burped.
As the editor pointed out, how much poorer would the world be if a well-meaning
adult had changed it to the more common croaked
Best
I'm not really sure we should keep it that way...
On Dec 18, 2007, at 8:32 PM, Christopher Stetson wrote:
Yes, I agree, it must be preserved! I remember reading a published
version of a child's poem about Spring which included the line:
Birds chirped, frogs burped.
As the editor pointed
- Original Message -
From: Omer katzir [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: lute@cs.dartmouth.edu
Sent: Tuesday, December 18, 2007 7:37 PM
Subject: [LUTE] Re: Wikiality
I'm not really sure we should keep it that way...
Sure we should. It's up to us looters to preserve the mystery surrounding
Hello Howard,
Welcome to the Lute list. Thanks for the review of this tuner. Très intéressant.
On the subject of electronic tuners, Does anybody have any experience with the
StroboSoft Software tuners from Peterson?
Craig
Craig R. Pierpont
Another Era Lutherie
www.anotherera.com
George
Obviously written by a 'substance entrepreneur' LOL
-Original Message-
From: Ray Brohinsky [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 18 December 2007 16:24
To: Andrew Gibbs
Cc: lute@cs.dartmouth.edu Net
Subject: [LUTE] Re: Wikiality
Andrew,
It is hard to read between the tears.
ray
On Dec 18,
George
This tuner does sound interesting. It appears to becompletely
prorammable, up to 14 presets? I had a look at the site you indicate,
and it also looks much smaller than the Petersen, which would be a
great advantage.
I presume there is a mic in? When you say it will probably go lower
Pagey bought the 6/12 specifically for Stairway to Heaven, seems he had
various guitar parts worked out in his head and needed something a bit
different. He also plays it on the 'Rain Song'. It's been valued at £50,000
but its more likely to be priceless. Other notable users; John McLaughlin -
Hi Ron and other lutenists
On 12/18/2007, Ron Fletcher [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I remember the 60's well enough that I still enjoy listening to that
stuff once in a while.
Yep! John Mayall's Bluesbreaker's Crusade was the bible of our
blues band in school times... And our pieces lasted at
On Dec 18, 2007, at 3:35 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
...Start playing
continuo! It is hard, really hard, in the beginning, but it is
worth of
all the troubles!
I'll take your word for it that it's worth it in the end, Arto. ;-)
I've been trying to teach myself continuo for most of this
Sorry! I only modernized the subject of my previous mail... ;-)
Arto
On 12/18/2007, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi Ron and other lutenists
On 12/18/2007, Ron Fletcher [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I remember the 60's well enough that I still enjoy listening to that
stuff
Andrew,
It is hard to read between the tears.
ray
Read further:
Lutenist: The lutenist is simply an instrument plucker without a
neck. He considers himself a much more dignified plucker than the
guitarist, although he is similar in construction to the guitarist
with the exclusion of his
Lutenist: The lutenist is simply an instrument plucker without a
neck.
Without a neck?
He couldn't be a violinist either, - he'd never get it under his chin!
This is a great thread for Christmas-cracker jokes.
I had no idea Wikipedea could be so funny!
Happy Christmas
Ron (UK)
To get
On 12/18/2007, David Rastall [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've been trying to teach myself continuo for most of this year, and
I'm having a terrible time with it: it seems that the more I learn,
the less I know!
Don't worry! Just play 3rds when you don't know what to do. And take
care to know,
it seems that the more I learn, the less I know!
By the way, just that seems to be the proper (and VERY classical) way of
learning! (Compare for ex. what Blaise Pascal wrote about knowledge.)
Arto
To get on or off this list see list information at
As far as I know Jimmy Page only ever used the doubleneck live.
On the studio version of stairway to heaven, the solo is played on a
telecaster and I think the electric 12 string is also a Fender.
He also uses the doubleneck live for the Song Remains The Same/Rainsong
block because the rain song
Welcome, Howard, and thank you for bringing this to our attention. I have
tuning forks in 415, 430 and 440, three tuners (the first, a programmable
second, a tiny clip-on third), tell myself I should only tune by ear, but am
sorely tempted by this new gadget ...
David
- Original Message
Without a neck?
He couldn't be a violinist either, - he'd never get it under his chin!
Where do you think treble viol players come from? Wickedpedia- a
never ending resource!
--
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