Well, my example was really to show how tricky attribution is.
But you can dig a bit further.
In this case, you can go by the Grove, but the
Grove is not really an authoritative source in
that it is a secondary reference. Yes, we all
read it, but it is a bit like Trader Joe's as well.
The real
Is Pastyme with Good Companye really not by Henry the VIII? Excuse this
perhaps very silly question from a 17c-iste, but I always assumed it was
actually by the great man himself - although there could easily be new
information/finds/theories I am not aware of. I note however that the New
How amazing. I never noticed this before. But yes, Francesco's Richafort
De mon triste deplaisir (Ness 121) follows the melody of Pastyme right the
way through from beginning to end.
Anyone know the words of the Richafort? 'De mon triste deplaisir' seems a
long way away from 'Pastyme with good
- Original Message -
From: Peter Martin [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Lute list lute@cs.dartmouth.edu
Sent: Saturday, March 29, 2008 5:46 AM
Subject: [LUTE] Re: Fingering question/Pastyme with Good Companye
| How amazing. I never noticed this before. But yes,
Francesco's Richafort
| De mon
Well spotted Peter!!!
dt
At 02:46 AM 3/29/2008, you wrote:
How amazing. I never noticed this before. But yes, Francesco's Richafort
De mon triste deplaisir (Ness 121) follows the melody of Pastyme right the
way through from beginning to end.
Anyone know the words of the Richafort? 'De mon