Dear Arto,
This Mouton Prelude is well known and included in lute school books as
teaching material / example. It is included in several historic manuscripts
in various versions, with and without dissection the bass course. For your
kind information I attach my hand-written copy of this piece
Dear Bernhard,
thanks! The 17706 (8r-8v) doesn't seem to indicate playing the
campanella, as you also have written. On the other hand the Saizenay
279153 (p. 114) does that, and uses special markings to that: g. and
p.. What (French?) words could those mean?
Best,
Arto
On 12/04/12 09:45,
:
From: Mathias Roesel mathias.roe...@t-online.de
Subject: [BAROQUE-LUTE] Re: Mouton's campanella technique
To: Baroque Lute Net baroque-lute@cs.dartmouth.edu
Date: Wednesday, 11 April, 2012, 23:12
Here Mouton uses his unique(?) technique of playing first only
the low
: 'Baroque Lute Net'; vihu...@cs.dartmouth.edu
Betreff: [BAROQUE-LUTE] Re: Mouton's campanella technique
Dear Bernhard,
thanks! The 17706 (8r-8v) doesn't seem to indicate playing the
campanella, as you also have written. On the other hand the Saizenay
279153 (p. 114) does that, and uses special
-...@cs.dartmouth.edu [mailto:lute-...@cs.dartmouth.edu] Im Auftrag
von wi...@cs.helsinki.fi
Gesendet: Donnerstag, 12. April 2012 09:34
An: Bernhard Fischer
Cc: 'Baroque Lute Net'; vihu...@cs.dartmouth.edu
Betreff: [BAROQUE-LUTE] Re: Mouton's campanella technique
Dear Bernhard,
thanks! The 17706 (8r-8v
Here Mouton uses his unique(?) technique of playing first only
the low octave of a bass course and only after some higher strings
the
upper octave of the same bass course. So it is actually the
campanella technique better known in baroque guitar music.
...
Does
@cs.dartmouth.edu
Sent: Wednesday, April 11, 2012 4:12 PM
Subject: [BAROQUE-LUTE] Re: Mouton's campanella technique
Here Mouton uses his unique(?) technique of playing first only
the low octave of a bass course and only after some higher strings
the
upper octave of the same