[LUTE] Re: [Viols] cello - Italian

2007-03-19 Thread Eugene C. Braig IV
Thanks for the clarification. Eugene At 01:14 PM 3/18/2007, Lex Eisenhardt wrote: small lute-shaped instruments (like in Kircher), that probably had the interval of a fifth. Don't you mean intervals of a third and fourth respectively? As I understand it, it is supposed that the

[LUTE] Re: [Viols] cello - Italian

2007-03-19 Thread Eugene C. Braig IV
At 02:46 PM 3/18/2007, Lex Eisenhardt wrote: Maybe the chitarrone is indeed a 'big kithara', rather than a 'big chitarra' (or 'big kuitra')? Chitarrone is the decendant of both, because they are the one, a decendant of Roman era lutes. RT In wikipedia it reads: 'It is important to note

[LUTE] Re: [Viols] cello - Italian

2007-03-19 Thread Eugene C. Braig IV
At 03:32 PM 3/18/2007, Stuart Walsh wrote: Roman Turovsky wrote: And I do. One of the earliest pieces of iconographic evidence shows a sevenstringer with a raised fingerboard. It is in my torban pages regional iconography. RT Guitars have been made with lots of variations in design and

[LUTE] Re: [Viols] cello - Italian

2007-03-19 Thread Roman Turovsky
But hornet-fly borrowed the stripes for its progeny. RT - Original Message - From: Eugene C. Braig IV [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: Stuart Walsh [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Roman Turovsky [EMAIL PROTECTED]; lute@cs.dartmouth.edu Sent: Monday, March 19, 2007 10:54 AM Subject: Re: [LUTE] Re: [Viols] cello

[LUTE] Re: [Viols] cello - Italian

2007-03-19 Thread Eugene C. Braig IV
At 10:55 AM 3/19/2007, Roman Turovsky wrote: But hornet-fly borrowed the stripes for its progeny. Errr... I think the mechanism might have been just a little different. Eugene To get on or off this list see list information at http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html

[LUTE] Re: [Viols] cello - Italian

2007-03-19 Thread Roman Turovsky
Whatever it takes, to avoid being eaten, by any mechanism possible. RT - Original Message - From: Eugene C. Braig IV [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: Roman Turovsky [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Lutelist lute@cs.dartmouth.edu Sent: Monday, March 19, 2007 11:22 AM Subject: Re: [LUTE] Re: [Viols] cello -

[LUTE] Re: [Viols] cello - Italian

2007-03-19 Thread Eugene C. Braig IV
At 11:24 AM 3/19/2007, Roman Turovsky wrote: Whatever it takes, to avoid being eaten, by any mechanism possible. Absolutely. To get on or off this list see list information at http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html

[LUTE] been there

2007-03-19 Thread bill kilpatrick
'yep: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ByB9H1ZiuYc .. followed by: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-ZLIjujIUU0 ___ What kind of emailer are you? Find out today - get a free analysis of your email personality. Take the

[LUTE] Re: been there

2007-03-19 Thread Donatella Galletti
poveri noi ( I can't translate...) Donatella - Original Message - From: bill kilpatrick [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: lute list lute@cs.dartmouth.edu Sent: Monday, March 19, 2007 5:14 PM Subject: [LUTE] been there 'yep: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ByB9H1ZiuYc .. followed by:

[LUTE] Re: Italian Frottole broadcast on BBC radio's site.

2007-03-19 Thread Orphenica
D**M, I missed it, did anybody record it? It's a pity that BBC offers it only for 7 days. we Chris Bolton schrieb: BBC radio's Early Music show has a broadcast which you can listen to online of Italian Frottole of Bartolomeo Tromboncino and Marco Cara. It is a nice programme featuring 3

[LUTE] Re: Italian Frottole broadcast on BBC radio's site.

2007-03-19 Thread Roman Turovsky
It is available on CD, CYPRES CYP1643. RT - Original Message - From: Orphenica [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: Chris Bolton [EMAIL PROTECTED] Cc: lute@cs.dartmouth.edu Sent: Monday, March 19, 2007 1:28 PM Subject: [LUTE] Re: Italian Frottole broadcast on BBC radio's site. D**M, I missed it,

[LUTE] Re: been there

2007-03-19 Thread Mathias Rösel
Donatella Galletti [EMAIL PROTECTED] schrieb: poveri noi ( I can't translate...) It translates as OMZFG, or so I'm told. Let's presume she doesn't play herself but pretends so as to make fun of it. -- Mathias 'yep: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ByB9H1ZiuYc .. followed by:

[LUTE] Re: been there

2007-03-19 Thread bill kilpatrick
i think it translates as ... should have studied archaeology. - bill --- Donatella Galletti [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: poveri noi ( I can't translate...) Donatella - Original Message - From: bill kilpatrick [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: lute list lute@cs.dartmouth.edu Sent:

[LUTE] Re: been there

2007-03-19 Thread vance wood
That was painful, dreadful, and awful. VW - Original Message - From: bill kilpatrick [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: lute list lute@cs.dartmouth.edu Sent: Monday, March 19, 2007 12:14 PM Subject: [LUTE] been there 'yep: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ByB9H1ZiuYc .. followed by:

[LUTE] Re: been there

2007-03-19 Thread David Rastall
On Mar 19, 2007, at 5:10 PM, bill kilpatrick wrote: i think it translates as ... should have studied archaeology. How about: don't quit your day job... DR - bill --- Donatella Galletti [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: poveri noi ( I can't translate...) Donatella - Original

[LUTE] Re: [Viols] cello - Italian

2007-03-19 Thread Neill Vanhinsberg
Are you suggesting hornet flies cross bred with hornets Roman??? Neill Roman Turovsky wrote: But hornet-fly borrowed the stripes for its progeny. RT - Original Message - From: Eugene C. Braig IV [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: Stuart Walsh [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Roman Turovsky [EMAIL