Here is the corrected youtube link:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s1UsSkgsWy8
Si dolce è'l tormento
in meantone with tastini
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"Not only was I there, but it was my house!"
Ah, then thanks for not only posting the video, but for recording it
(or having it recorded). From what I could see you have a lovely space
for presenting concerts. I couldn't help noticing a high-end speaker
behind the performers (Ma
Not only was I there, but it was in my house!
On Tue, Oct 6, 2009 at 2:22 PM, <[1]nedma...@aol.com> wrote:
Thanks for posting the McFarlane & Rosenfield youtube site, DS (were
you there?). Really wonderful playing with a great rapport between the
two.
Ned
--
References
On Wed, 07 Oct 2009 08:14:26 -0700, David Tayler
wrote:
> Si dolce è il tormento
> in meantone a la tastini
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tp4Wobs458I
Beautiful! Thanks David!
> Also check out Arto's arrangement for solo lute :)
Well, just in case someone happens to be interested, there ar
Le 7 oct. 09 à 16:50, Daniel Winheld a écrit :
Even better - Sandor Vegh Quartet.
RT
The Vegh are superb. The only group that makes the Bartok quartets
truly enjoyable & comprehensible to me. Haven't heard their
Beethoven; until then I second the Italiano.
The Borodin are very good, vibrato
>Dear All, If you're going to go this route, why not try a synthetic
> oud plectrum? Jim
Not for sale at the corner band instrument store. Got lots of leather
scraps and short lengths of gut string.
--
Dana Emery
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From: "Daniel Winheld"
>Even better - Sandor Vegh Quartet.
RT
The Vegh are superb. The only group that makes the Bartok quartets
truly enjoyable & comprehensible to me. Haven't heard their
Beethoven; until then I second the Italiano.
The Borodin are very good, vibrato very much under control-
The youtube link is down, here is the Vimeo link
http://www.vimeo.com/6923719
At 08:14 AM 10/7/2009, you wrote:
Si dolce è il tormento
in meantone a la tastini
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Yummy! Thank you for this.
Eugene
> -Original Message-
> From: lute-...@cs.dartmouth.edu [mailto:lute-...@cs.dartmouth.edu] On
> Behalf Of David Tayler
> Sent: Wednesday, October 07, 2009 11:14 AM
> To: lute-cs.dartmouth.edu
> Subject: [LUTE] Si Dolce
>
> Si dolce è il tormento
> in me
Si dolce è il tormento
in meantone a la tastini
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tp4Wobs458I
Also check out Arto's arrangement for solo lute :)
dt
To get on or off this list see list information at
http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
>Even better - Sandor Vegh Quartet.
>RT
The Vegh are superb. The only group that makes the Bartok quartets
truly enjoyable & comprehensible to me. Haven't heard their
Beethoven; until then I second the Italiano.
The Borodin are very good, vibrato very much under control- they are
also my favor
The Smithson String Quartet (of the Smithsonian Institution) has
recorded Op. 18 on original instruments. Very fine playing and very
nicely recorded.
Ned
--
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You've got "Britain's Got Talent." What could be better than that?
DR
If you have never seen these shows, I can reveal that the first five or six
are absolutely chronic, but enough to be comedy. Maybe there are the
exceptional one or two acts that are passed for later in the series.
It has b
One weekend I heard both the Julliard and the Vegh playing one of the
late quartets.
A couper le souffle!
I did prefer the lyricism of the Vegh, but both were superb.
Anthony
Le 7 oct. 09 à 13:52, Roman Turovsky a écrit :
Even better - Sandor Vegh Quartet.
RT
- Original Message - From
Even better - Sandor Vegh Quartet.
RT
- Original Message -
From:
To:
Cc: ;
Sent: Wednesday, October 07, 2009 7:44 AM
Subject: [LUTE] Re: Beethoven Quartets
Dear Oskar and All,
My favorites (especially the Opus 132) are by the Quaretto Italiano.
The vibrato doesn't seem as i
Dear Oskar and All,
My favorites (especially the Opus 132) are by the Quaretto Italiano.
The vibrato doesn't seem as intrusive on their renderings.
Jim
Oct 7, 2009 04:58:07 AM, [1]oskar_demari_jo...@hotmail.com wrote:
Hi there,
I was wondering - has any 'early music' g
The attachment didn't seem to go through yesterday, so here's another
try.
Sep 28, 2009 04:27:08 PM, [1]pjones...@toucansurf.com wrote:
Hello all,
Long time no post.
I work for BBC Radio 3 attached to the BBC Symphony Orchestra and
early next
year we have the won
Dear All,
If you're going to go this route, why not try a synthetic oud pl=
ectrum?
Jim
Oct 6, 2009 06:17:02 PM, [1]dem...@suffolk.lib.ny.us= wrote:
>
&= gt; hi Stuart,
>
> I remember the suggested guitar string being= the 1st (the high
e). I had
>
Oskar,
do you ghappen to play the lute?
Mathias
"Oskar De Mari" schrieb:
>Hi there,
>I was wondering - has any 'early music' group approached Beethoven's
>string quartets? I was listening to the Takas quartet and enjoying
>them, but wondered if perhaps we could do without 60 or
Hi there,
I was wondering - has any 'early music' group approached Beethoven's
string quartets? I was listening to the Takas quartet and enjoying
them, but wondered if perhaps we could do without 60 or 70 percent of
the vibrato!
O
_
Nowadays - in a different era - we easily laugh at this stuff and at
the polystyrene scraping ( a much more jokey, Cagey thing anyway)?. I'm
not so sure we would have been so easily laughing back then.
I remember going to a 'Fires of London' concert some decades ago, and
laughing at what I
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