Sunday, the 12th of February
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Dear Lutenists
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I have just received an experimental synthetic loaded string from Mimmo Peruffo
of Aquila. Here are photos permitting you to compare the aspect of the new
string with that of a loaded Venice, and also a
previous generation HT loaded:
Here is the ne
Well, I'm not in the UK, but... Unfortunately, one of the greatest proponents
of classical mandolin, UK denizen Alison Stephens, is recently deceased. She
was a student of the late Hugo D'Alton, was loved, and is missed. She taught
at Trinity College: http://www.trinitylaban.ac.uk/. I don't
PS: Chris (http://www.chrisacquavella.com/) is a protégé of Alison. He is
based in the US, but tours the UK with some frequency. You may want to drop
him a line as well, just in case...
Eugene
-Original Message-
From: lute-...@cs.dartmouth.edu [mailto:lute-...@cs.dartmouth.edu] On Beh
I was talking to someone the other day about viol fretting,
specifically: using old strings as fret gut. Along with some
information on that, he sent me this quote from Dowland. He didn't
specify John or Robert:
"therefore doe this; let the two first frets neerest the head of the
Instr
On Feb 15, 2012, at 9:20 AM, David R wrote:
> I was talking to someone the other day about viol fretting, specifically:
> using old strings as fret gut. Along with some information on that, he sent
> me this quote from Dowland. He didn't specify John or Robert:
>
> "therefore doe this; let
Demystified by Ian Harwood in his chapter of "Making Muscial Instruments."
Contratenor = 4th course
Great Meanes = 3rd course
Small Meanes = 2nd course
Trebles = 1st course.
So there.
G
On 02/15/2012 12:48 PM, howard posner wrote:
On Feb 15, 2012, at 9:20 AM, David R wrote:
I was talking t
Dear David,
Thomas Robinson gives the names of the strings of a 6-course lute as
follows:
Treble.
Small Meanes.
Great Meanes.
Contra-tenor.
Tenor.
Bass.
Presumably the strings used for the 5th and 6th courses were too thick
to be used for frets.
Best wishes,
Stewart McCoy.
-Original Messa
I checked my old Schott hard-copy facsimile, and in the lovely,
full-page tuning/interval table (on p. 19 of that edition, but you can
miss it) I see that "trebles" that are the first course, "small meanes"
the second, "great meanes" the third, and "Countertenor" the fourth.
On Wed,
Another oldie but goodie, the Merula Ciaccona.
Usually performed on the guitar, this version we used the theorbo.
Although I would probably use the guitar next time, using the
recoder, violin, cello and lute allows each indvidual voice the most
transparency.
More transparent than with two violins
You guys know everything! Thanks for the information. Although I
have a copy of Varietie of Lute Lessons, I confess that I've never
read the introduction! At least not until now anyway.
Thanks again,
David R
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http://torban.org/sarmatoruthenicae/audio/391.mp3
http://torban.org/sarmatoruthenicae/images/391.pdf
Enjoy.
Amitiès,
RT
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Hi,
I have uploaded a new lute duet for "2 lutes -Ad Quartam".
Antegnati - Ricercare del Decimo Tono
It is a fine Ricercare.
enjoy it
Anton
2 Lutes (ad Quartam)
http://www.mediafire.com/?nalde7cqaafu3
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Hi,
I have uploaded a new Intavolations for "2 lutes Ad Secundam"
- Anonym - Ricercar (Manoscritto Feininger) -
Enjoy it
Anton
2 Lutes (ad Secundam)
http://www.mediafire.com/?ae2lzum1z3ms0
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