Many thanks for the responses.
> On Mar 23, 2017, at 11:13 AM, William Brohinsky wrote:
>
> ..."Singing Odes of With and Mirth;" is, of course,
> "Singing Odes of Wit and Mirth;".
> My apologies.
> Ray B
No need to apologize. Ith was such an obvious thypo thath ith wasn’th going to
l
..."Singing Odes of With and Mirth;" is, of course,
"Singing Odes of Wit and Mirth;".
My apologies.
Ray B
On Thu, Mar 23, 2017 at 2:08 PM, William Brohinsky
<[1]tiorbin...@gmail.com> wrote:
And the song that ends "Better to be drunk..." Is indeed "When I
taste
And the song that ends "Better to be drunk..." Is indeed "When I taste
my goblet deep", #93, "For a Bafs", from the Second Book of "Select
Ayres and Dialogues" by Henry Laws. It is also available as a PDF scan
on IMSLP:
[1]http://imslp.org/wiki/Select_Ayres_and_Dialogues_(Lawes,_Henr
Hello, Howard,
"Tune your lute and raise your voyce" appears as number 10 in the
second volume of John Playford's Theatre of Music.
A PDF scan is available online at IMSLP.Org. The overall page is
[1]http://imslp.org/wiki/The_Theater_of_Music_(Playford,_John)
Ray Brohinsky
On
The first song is called 'when i raise my goblet deep' possibly by
Henry Lawes, though I'm not sure. I have a copy at home so can send
to you tomorrow if you'd like.
Toby
On 23 Mar 2017 04:42, "howard posner" <[1]howardpos...@ca.rr.com>
wrote:
Can someone plug the leaks in