On 01/10/12 21:55, Arto Wikla wrote:
Hi all,
After the Paunges of a desperate lover, Mr. McLaughland's way, by mr.
Beck (ms. Balcarres 187)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-PO3whJQX6g&feature=youtu.be
http://vimeo.com/50701736
Does this "paunges" mean "pangs"? So some kind of pains or sorrows?
Arto
Dear lutenists,
I happened to meet one melody in the Balcarres' ms., which I know I
know from the times of my early student years - it was actually a
recorded example in the appendix record of one VERY early book about
computer music (!). The piece was called with a name that was somehow
connected to a Scottish military march; I cannot remember the actual
name... Anyhow that same melody is in the Balcarres ms., number 186:
"The canaries, the new way, in Mr. McLaughlan's fashion, by mr. Beck".
The beginning of the piece is actually march-like, while only the end
is in 3!
What makes me wonder, is that Matthew Spring in his wonderful edition
doesn't give any hint of this piece being a song or some kind of
Scottish march.
My todays "y-tubing" and "vimeoing" of this 186 is in:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KBm6T7Uq5cc&feature=youtu.be
http://vimeo.com/50544077
All the best,
Arto
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