Re: Music tech

2005-05-10 Thread Ed Durbrow
> Do any of you less technically challenged know of a way to convert AIFF
>format (CD's) to a midi file?  I'm using Mac OS X, and I have available
>Garage Band and iTunes.

If it is a monophonic sound file, there is software that will 
identify the notes. Have a look at: http://www.celemony.com/

If you want to transcribe polyphonic music (it won't convert it to 
MIDI for you) try: http://www.seventhstring.com/

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



To get on or off this list see list information at
http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html


Re: Huwet

2005-05-10 Thread Miles Dempster

Martin,

You wrote:

> About halfway through the second page the subject appears in the bass 
> (starting on 2nd fret, 6th course) - perhaps that's the bit you were 
> referring to, Elliott?

No, this isn't the bit that Elliott was referring to, it's before that, 
and its rather more hidden or "suggested". Here is the passage; I have 
highlighted the key notes of the subject by putting them in capitals:

  2

A---a---
a-|-c---|-a---d-a-d---|-
-cc---d---d---|-d---c---c-d-|-C---A---|-
-d-e--e-d-E-e-|---c-|-|-
-ee---|-a-c-e---|---a-c---|-
--c---c-a-e-

3   2

-c---F-a---E---e-f---h---h-f-e-c-a--
-a---|-c---f-f-|---a-a-d---|
-D-c-|-d---|---A---|
-a-c-e-a-e---|---a-c---|-F-a---|
---c-|---a-e---|---c---|
---a-e-|

Best


Miles Dempster

--




To get on or off this list see list information at
http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html


ISO Ronn McFarlane

2005-05-10 Thread Craig Allen
Ronn, please contact me off list. Thank you.

Regards,
Craig


___
$0 Web Hosting with up to 200MB web space, 1000 MB Transfer
10 Personalized POP and Web E-mail Accounts, and much more.
Signup at www.doteasy.com



To get on or off this list see list information at
http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html


Re: van Eyck, Ballet gravesand

2005-05-10 Thread Jose Luis Rojo
Thank you again!
best wishes form Spain,
JL
adS wrote:

>LGS-Europe wrote:
>  
>
>>Ballette Gravesand (Fluyten Lusthof I) = Laura (Fluyten Lusthof II) = the 
>>English song 'The fairest nymph the valleys or mountain ever bred' = a mask 
>>song.
>>
>>First appearance in Holland is in Starter's Friesche Lusthof.
>>
>>Lute versions in:
>>M.L. lute book (f 32r, no title)
>>Board lute book (f 38v grays Inn mask)
>>
>>
>
>Add:
>Osborn fb 789v/6   The Queens ffuneralle
>M. L.  30r/2   graysin maske
>
>
>  
>
>>There are also versions for lyra viol (playable on a lute) in:
>>GB-Och MS 531-532 (item 31, no title)
>>Browne lyra viol MS (Temple Masque)
>>Manchester lyra viol MS (Alman)
>>
>>All this, and much more (back ground, instrumental versions (e.g. a keyboard 
>>setting by Orlando Gibbons),
>>
>>
>
>118636v/2  ye fairest Nymphes ye valleys.  Brookes, No. 760
>5609 2/2   The fairest Nymphes the Valleys or Mountains ever bred etc  
>Brookes, 
>No. 760
>Och 437 5r Grayseind: Maske:   Brookes, No. 760
>Bunbury13v-14r/1   Grayes Inn MaskeBrookes, No. 1746
>Rogers  3r The fairest Nimphes the valleys or mountains ever bred, etc 
>Brookes, 
>No. 1746
>36661  60v A Maske By Mr orlando Gibbons   Brookes, No. 1746
>5609   127/1   The Fairest Nymphes the Valleys Brookes, No. 1746; copied from 
>10337
>118639rye fairest nymphes ye valleys etc.  Brookes, No. 1746
>5609   124/1   The fairest Nymphes the Valleys Brookes, No. 760
>
>
>
>Rainer aus dem Spring
>
>
>
>
>To get on or off this list see list information at
>http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
>
>  
>

--


Re: Antwort: Re: Galilei

2005-05-10 Thread Mathias Rösel
> But Michelangelo G. really is a very clever composer!

what I find most interesting in his pieces are his variations. There is
a thread between Galilei, and Gianoncelli, and Mezangeau and the
Gaultiers. A certain fashion of breaking melodic lines. I, for one, try
not to play them too fast, but in a moderate tempo. IMHO, the crucial
point is in making audible, or keeping, the melodic line.

Best wishes,

Mathias
--

To get on or off this list see list information at
http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html


Re: a note from Paul Beier

2005-05-10 Thread G.R. Crona
Follow up question:

Does anyone have this article by Beier readily available?

B.R.
G.

On 5/8/05, Nancy Carlin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Here is a note from Paul Beier about his divisions.
> Nancy Carlin
> 
> Thanks for this interesting message. The extra divisions in the Galilei
> recording come from an unknown manuscript I found in my basement-- no,
> actually I improvised them myself, so I expect royalties if anyone copies
> them ( =96 just kidding!). Now that I think about it, I do remember having,
> in fact, once published one set of my own divisions on a Galilei sonata
> (can't remember which one) in the Lute Society of America Newsletter around
> 1980 (during my three year stint as editor of that august publication), so
> if anyone is interested, well, there it is!
> 
> Nancy Carlin Associates
> P.O. Box 6499
> Concord, CA 94524  USA
> phone 925/686-5800 fax 925/680-2582
> web site - www.nancycarlinassociates.com
> 
> Administrator THE LUTE SOCIETY OF AMERICA
> web site - http://LuteSocietyofAmerica.org
> 
> --
> 
> To get on or off this list see list information at
> http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
>




Re: Antwort: Re: Galilei

2005-05-10 Thread Arto Wikla

Dear Thomas,

on Mon, 9 May 2005 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> didn't Werl just add pieces? I haven't looked at this music as variations
> ..
> I, too, like the M.Galilei

Well, I just was perhaps too eager to write something positive, something
"on topic" to the List... ;-)

But Michelangelo G. really is a very clever composer! Perhaps it is in the 
genes? Just think the father Vincenzo and the big brother Galileo!  :-)

Arto



To get on or off this list see list information at
http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html