I strongly believe that there is a tremendous potential for lute music in tiny
locations - there is a concept of "living room concerts" for instance,
expecting a small crowd. Also, lute music on the map of the music business is
located in the alternative field, there are venues by all kinds of
Didn't know this one. It's on Youtube. Nice. Thanks Martyn!
G.
On Fri, Aug 28, 2020 at 10:01 AM Martyn Hodgson
<[1]hodgsonmar...@mail.cs.dartmouth.edu> wrote:
Do you not count Andrew Parrott's Una stravaganza dei medici?
Here's the opening
[1]Una Stravaganza
That's true, but nowadays, concert halls are no longer the main way
people enjoy music. The kind of late-18th/19th century logic that
killed the lute isn't relevant to how we experience music anymore.
As for the classical canon, let's just say that it isn't really
mainstream anymore
I agree, that one was very neat, especially because of the music
itself.
Gesendet: Donnerstag, 27. August 2020 um 23:57 Uhr
Von: "Alain Veylit"
An: tristanvonneum...@gmx.de, lute@cs.dartmouth.edu
Betreff: [LUTE] Re: future of the lute
I beg to differ - see Tous les
Glad to read all your testimonies and how from Gerwig, followed by Bream
lute record in 1962 (?), I found a familiar track. Between 62 and 1965
while in the Navy, I had a copy of Varieties, a poor guitar with
capotasto and third string semitone lower...well you know ! In 65, while
in Paris, I
Do you not count Andrew Parrott's Una stravaganza dei medici?
Here's the opening
[1]Una Stravaganza Dei Medici (1)
[youtube.png]
Una Stravaganza Dei Medici (1)
On Friday, 28 August 2020, 08:21:54 BST, Jean-Marie Poirier
Agreed but I maybe partial here !
Jean-Marie
> Le 28 août 2020 à 00:00, Alain Veylit a écrit :
>
> I beg to differ - see Tous les matins du monde
>
>
>> On 8/27/20 2:41 PM, tristanvonneum...@gmx.de wrote:
>> him.
>>
>>A good Early Music movie has yet to be made...
>
>
>
> To get on