[LUTE] Palestrina and Italian Intabulations
Hello collective wisdom! While there seems to be plenty of intabulations of sacred polyphony by the Spanish and Flemish composers, there doesn't seem to be many of Palestrina and the Roman school. I am aware of the lovely intabulations for two or more lutes by Thomas Höger, and those by Ron Andrico, but these are modern. Is there a reason why period ones don't seem to exist? I was playing the accompaniments in Andrico's editions and the pieces seem to fall very nicely under the hand, so I'd be surprised if nothing is out there from those days. Does anyone know of anything from back then? Or other modern intabulations even? Edward -- To get on or off this list see list information at http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
[LUTE] Cleveland Lute Festival Classes
Here is a list of the classes that the LSA will offer at the Cleveland Lute Festival this June: Early Renaissance Ideas: A Humanist Fakebook (Crawford Young) The Rise of Ensemble Music (Young) Fantasias on a theme: Ballo del Gran Duca (Douglas Freundlich) Intabulators' round table (Freundlich) Baroque Lute Topics / Masterclass (Robert Barto) German tablature for beginners (Barto) French lute (and theorbo) music from chanson to Weiss (Liz Kenny) English Song 1597-1649 (Kenny) The Secrets of the Muses Revealed: The Fascinating Repertoire for 10-course lute (Paul O'Dette) Renaissance Lute Master Class (O'Dette) Bach and the Lute (Nigel North) The Good Accompanist (North) El cancionero de Palacio (Xavier Diaz-Latorre) Terpsichore (Diaz-Latorre) Fundamentals of Renaissance Lute Playing (Chris Morrongiello) Elizabethan & Jacobean Ballads & Popular Music (Morrongiello) Renaissance Lute Master Class (Ronn McFarlane) -- To get on or off this list see list information at http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html