. 2017 à 20:40, G. C. a Ãécrit :
> Ã Ã Ã >
> Ã Ã Ã > So did Denis pass on works of Ennemond as being his own, and
> not
> Ã Ã Ã only
> Ã Ã Ã > transcribing them from vieil tone and getting huge credit
> from D.
> Ã Ã Ã A.
> Ã Ã Ã > Smith 40 years ago for that?
> Ã Ã Ã >
> Ã Ã Ã > --
> Ã Ã Ã >
> Ã Ã Ã >
>
> References
>
> 1. http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/btv1b90632544/f89.item)
> 2. http://msl.cat/revista/56 Goy.pdf
>
>
> To get on or off this list see list information at
> http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
Jorge Torres
Music Department
Williams Center for the Arts
Lafayette College
Easton, PA 18042
(610)330-5365
torr...@lafayette.edu
--
It figures that it would be a Spanish king! =)
Would anyone have a source for this fact?
Jorge
On Aug 29, 2012, at 12:30 PM, Mathias Rösel wrote:
Dear friends,
I seem to remember having read somewhere a story about a French lutenist
(Vieux Gautier perhaps) playing before some king: the
, then no permission is
required. The latter is indeed in the PD. Nevertheless, it is always polite
for scholars to ask for permission and acknowledge the library with the
original.
Jorge Torres
On May 16, 2012, at 7:50 AM, Roman Turovsky wrote:
Not in the US. The image remains PD here.
RT
. The last prelude, entitled Prelude sur tous les tons modulates
through all of the keys presented in the 17 preceding preludes. A pretty
remarkable display of pedagogy.
Best,
Jorge Torres
On Oct 31, 2011, at 8:34 AM, Christopher Wilke wrote:
Arthur,
--- On Sun, 10/30/11, A. J. Ness
UMI.
Jorge Torres
On May 3, 2011, at 9:57 AM, Grzegorz Joachimiak wrote:
Dear friends,
I'm looking for books by Wallace J. Rave:
1st: A Baroque Lute Tablature: Jacob Bittner #8216;Pieces de
Lut#8217;, 1682. Diss., U. of Illinois, 1965.
and
2nd: Some Manuscripts of French
could have used the version in Gaultie's Livre de
tablature:
Jorge Torres
On Mar 24, 2011, at 1:21 PM, Bernd Haegemann wrote:
Thank you for the link, Luca!
On the same page is also Vallet I II, and works by Hagen.
best regards
B.
- Original Message - From: Luca Manassero
him and/or his books?
Nicolas
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Jorge Torres
Associate Professor of Music
237 Williams Center
Lafayette College
Easton, PA 18042
(610)330-5365
[3]torr
of
chord shapes for the baroque lute, similar to the chord charts of
Gaspar Sanz and others for the baroque guitar. Can anyone help?
Stewart McCoy.
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Jorge Torres
Associate Professor
theorbo, and
they do have a lutenist at the University, but no instrument. Is
there any similar service to the VDGS's that will rent instruments?
Best,
Jorge
Jorge Torres
Associate Professor of Music
237 Williams Center
Lafayette College
Easton, PA 18042
(610)330-5365
torr...@lafayette.edu
Actually, the Broude Edition in NOT Pièces de luth, but rather, Livre
de tablature, which was printed posthumously by Gaultier's widow.
Jorge Torres
On Apr 22, 2010, at 11:29 AM, David van Ooijen wrote:
2010/4/22 Luca Manassero l...@manassero.net:
I am looking for Denis (et Ennemond
. Instead, he simply states that the first of two notes
within a beat should be longer than the one that follows. I believe
that he is being intentionally vague.
Best,
Jorge
Jorge Torres
Associate Professor of Music
237 Williams Center
Lafayette College
Easton, PA 18042
(610)330-5365
torr
in order to change the
rhythm to something that sounds more like 6/8 or 12/8 seems pedantic
to me.
All the best,
Jorge Torres
On Dec 28, 2008, at 12:51 PM, Mathias Rösel wrote:
I would imagine it could be binary.
Both Tocxin by Denis Gaultier and Toxin by Charles Mouton are gigues
in
4
In the 17th century LeSage de Richee (1695), a self-proclaimed student of
Mouton, uses three dots to indicate the right hand ring finger, but that's
a 13-course instrument. None of the printed French sources prior to 1700
(Gault I and II, Gallot, Perinne, or Mouton) use the ring finger.
Jorge
Sorry, the designation I mentioned is from a MS for 13 course with
instructions by LeSage, noted in Doug Smith and Peter Danner's article How
Beginners...Should Proceed, JLSA, 1976.
Jorge
On 1/5/07 12:14 PM, Mathias Rösel [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Jorge Torres [EMAIL PROTECTED] schrieb
List:
The Burwell informant makes it clear that the ring finger is not used:
For the forefinger of the right hand we mark one dot; for the second
finger, two dots. The two other fingers we do not use. (Dart, 31)
This is in line with the printed French sources prior to 1700 (Gault I and
II,
sources
with pieces in E major.
Jorge Torres
On 9/22/06 1:16 PM, Edward Martin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Danny,
Good question. The French baroque lutenists do use F# minor a lot
Gaultiers, Gallot, deVissee, DuBut, Emond, Pinel, de St.Luc, and Mouton use
it a great deal. Also
This isn't just restricted to the lute...there aren't many pieces for bowed
strings in c#m, and not many for keyboard either. While there may be some
exceptional works here and there, the majority of string writing remains in
the idiomatic keys for those instruments. In manuscript collections we
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