There are also 4 Hasse Arias in the so called Munich manuscript, that
had been published also by Tree editions with a very founded critical
commentary by Frank Legl.
http://mss.slweiss.de/index.php?lang=engid=2type=msscomp=Hasse
Best regards
Markus
Am 24.08.2011 16:23, schrieb hera caius:
Could anyone plse let me have the direct email address of Rod?
MH
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Yes Chris, I've seen these too, on the type known as an 'English
Guitar' (18th century I think). It's funny - a capo seems such an
obvious idea and doesn't need anything high tech to work - for example
the type with a peg and gut around the back of the neck to hold it down
on the
I was a happy as well as heavy capo user on lutes, in my days of
plastic metal wound strings and equal fretting. But all gut on a
R-lute means from very thin to very thick strings, something the
average capo cannot handle very well. On top of that, unequal fretting
(and even in ET you'll need to
Check out the 12 string capo.
[1]http://preview.tinyurl.com/3kpnj9w
A simple idea but I don't know what material they would have had that
would work the way this simple plastic works. You would possibly have
to reset the spacing if you used it in more than one position on a
Capo on lute?
I use selfmade one:
[1]http://www.ljplus.ru/img4/_/m/_m_a_s_t_e_r_/DSCF6776.jpg
It's constructed as flamenco sejilla. Fits easily on any fret.
2011/8/25 Ed Durbrow [2]edurb...@sea.plala.or.jp
Check out the 12 string capo.
Does anyone have a copy in lute tablature of the guitar part of
Vivaldi's Concerto in D Major? Thank you in advance.
Craig Allen
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