Hi Charles,
It is very much in the style of this music for a performer to adapt
notes to others that he likes better and especially cadential
flourishes can be changed. Paul O'Dette talked a bit about this in the
class he gave at the LSA's lute week in 2012. You can see a bit more
Hi all,
Paul writes on the sleeve notes that he has added embelishments as a
hommage to Julian Bream. Bream used to play them but they were of his
own invention. So theu cannot be found in ye olde scriptures.
my $ 0.02
Enjoy the weekend
Lex
2014-06-14 18:17 GMT+02:00 AJN <[
In other words, you need the PIckeringe setting. Facsimile on Veylit's
Django pages. Page 58-59 (the cited page 59 is a continuation).
On 06/14/14, AJN wrote:
"The Carman's Whistle" is a ballad tune about a lad meeting a damsel
under a myrtle tree.
"O God a mercy: Carman, thou
We have posted our Saturday morning quotes. This week, the theme is
accompaniment.
[1]http://wp.me/p15OyV-121
Ron & Donna
--
References
1. http://wp.me/p15OyV-121
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On 2014-06-14, 9:13 AM, Bernd Haegemann wrote:
I'm very disappointed by both of the versions: to me they don't sound
like flamenco at all!
Note that the correct title for this piece is "Carman's Whistle," not
"Carmen's Whistle," and that it was written by John Johnson, not Georges
Bizet.
I
Thank you, Nancy, for this detailed info! I have one version, its quite
similar to what Paul plays, but without the scales at the end. I
wouldn't be surprised if he is using what I have but just embellished
the last variation.
On Fri, Jun 13, 2014 at 10:30 PM, Nancy Carlin
<[1]na
On 14.06.2014 04:30, Nancy Carlin wrote:
There are 2 Carmen's Whistles -
I'm very disappointed by both of the versions: to me they don't sound
like flamenco at all!
Enjoy the weekend!
B
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