[LUTE] Re: Palestrina's lute (was Musical Crimes etc)

2008-06-10 Thread Ed Durbrow

On Jun 9, 2008, at 6:46 AM, Stewart McCoy wrote:

> Many thanks indeed. The Amazon site gives a lot of detail about
> Palestrina, and confirms that he used the lute while composing. Jessie
> Owens' book certainly looks a good read.


Composers at Work? Yeah, it's a real page turner. :-)  Here is the  
exact quote. It is in the chapter called Composing Without Writing. I  
just happened to turn right to it on p.73.

There is also evidence that Palestrina may have used the lute in  
composing. A letter from a Mantuan court official, Annibale Capello,  
describes Palestrina's composition of a Mass for Duke Guglielmo  
Gonzaga: Palestrina has begun to set the Kyrie and Gloria of the  
first mass on the lute." Given the fact that many composers were  
accomplished organists or lutenists (including William Byrd, Adrian  
Willaert, and Palestirna himself) it is quite likely that further  
evidence will turn up.


One thing I think scholars like yourself will like about this book is  
that the footnotes are at the bottom of the pages, instead of at the  
end of chapters or the book, and when she quotes someone she puts the  
original language right next to the English translation in two  
columns, - a nice touch.

Also on p. 72 she says:
It is noteworthy that the Hungarian lutenist and composer Balint  
Bakfark had himself portrayed in the woodcut on the title page of his  
first publication holding a lute while seated in front of a table  
that had a quill pen and an open music book" the image is of the  
composer playing and writing. (There is a picture.)

cheers,

Ed Durbrow
Saitama, Japan
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www9.plala.or.jp/edurbrow/



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[LUTE] Re: Palestrina's lute (was Musical Crimes etc)

2008-06-09 Thread Arthur Ness
Jessie Anne Owens was recently elected president of the American
Musicological Society (membership 3000+), which is a indication 
of the quality of her scholarship, and of the respect she has 
earned from her colleagues.  Her book, which has awarded the Deem 
Talyor Prize from ASCAP,  also has information about sketches of 
lute music (drafts for a parody
fantasia on Francesco and drafts for intabulations), etc.
Sketches and drafts of music for lute are quite rare.

I think in her book is an old engraving of an organist playing 
from separate part books strew around him.  And there is also the 
account of Mozart at the Thomas Church in Leipzig playnng J.B. 
Bach motets from the part books.

I should probably point out that the lute sketches Jessie 
examines are
probably the work of amateurs, not professionals.  One was done, 
I suspect, by the Augsburg Patrician Hans Heinrich Herwarth or 
his lutenist when he and his family fled to Memmingen to escape 
the plague in Auygsburg.
=AJN (Boston, Mass.)=

- Original Message - 
From: "howard posner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Lute Net" 
Sent: Sunday, June 08, 2008 7:50 PM
Subject: [LUTE] Re: Palestrina's lute (was Musical Crimes etc)


| On Jun 8, 2008, at 2:46 PM, Stewart McCoy wrote:
|
| >  The Amazon site gives a lot of detail about
| > Palestrina, and confirms that he used the lute while
composing. Jessie
| > Owens' book certainly looks a good read.
|
| I was mistaken in saying it was an Amazon site, BTW.  It's
Google
| Book Search.
| --
|
| To get on or off this list see list information at
| http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
|





[LUTE] Re: Palestrina's lute (was Musical Crimes etc)

2008-06-08 Thread howard posner
On Jun 8, 2008, at 2:46 PM, Stewart McCoy wrote:

>  The Amazon site gives a lot of detail about
> Palestrina, and confirms that he used the lute while composing. Jessie
> Owens' book certainly looks a good read.

I was mistaken in saying it was an Amazon site, BTW.  It's Google  
Book Search.
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