[LUTE] Re: Kapsberger Canarios

2008-10-28 Thread Rob MacKillop
Steve, Normally these pieces are played on the theorbo, so if it definitely was a baroque guitar being played, they must have been arrangements. I know Maxwell Davis's Farewell to Stromness, although I haven't heard it for a decade or so. I seem to recall it is a set of

[LUTE] Re: Kapsberger Canarios

2008-10-28 Thread Arto Wikla
Hi Steve I just heard a fellow playing a baroque guitar solo on the radio. It was something called Arpegiatt and Canarios, by Kapsberger. The Canarios sounded rather similar to the modern piano piece, Farewell to Stromness, which we may know as a guitar piece. I've thought for a

[LUTE] Re: Kapsberger Canarios

2008-10-28 Thread Steve Ramey
- Original Message From: Rob MacKillop [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: Steve Ramey [EMAIL PROTECTED] Cc: lute@cs.dartmouth.edu Sent: Tuesday, October 28, 2008 4:32:45 AM Subject: [LUTE] Re: Kapsberger Canarios Steve, Normally these pieces are played on the theorbo, so

[LUTE] Re: Kapsberger Canarios

2008-10-28 Thread wikla
Hi Steve, yes it is in pdf, the original Italian tabulature. See my page http://www.cs.helsinki.fi/u/wikla/mus/Tiorba/ Happy playing! Arto On 10/28/2008, Steve Ramey [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Arto, That's exactly it. Thank you! Is it available in a PDF file? Best regards,

[LUTE] Re: Kapsberger Canarios

2008-10-28 Thread Sam Chapman
Here's a tip: Farewell to Stromness is great on theorbo! 2008/10/28 Steve Ramey [EMAIL PROTECTED]: Dear Collected Wisdom, I just heard a fellow playing a baroque guitar solo on the radio. It was something called Arpegiatt and Canarios, by Kapsberger. The Canarios sounded rather