Well Ron you've provoked me into spending a thoroughly enjoyable hour
playing through my Piccinini, which I haven't spent nearly enough
time with since I got my archlute. Thank you!
While it's certainly true that weak beat/index finger dots were
sprinkled around so automatically and frequently
Compare Cups Burger's and Peachy Ninny's arpeggio patterns to later 17th
century separee practice! Take M. Gally Lays's and Junnon Shelly's
editions into account (their sprezzature). Kinda common practice, no?
Mathias
Daniel Winheld [EMAIL PROTECTED] schrieb:
Well Ron you've provoked me into
Peter wrote about Picinini:
Then there also is the other strange thing in his instructions. I wonder,
did he loose his ring finger in a duel? After acknowledging in passing
that finger's existence --maybe only in others?-- he seems to completely
ignore it.
There's a whole school of post
Peter Nightingale [EMAIL PROTECTED] schrieb:
Dear list,
Is there a rationale for Piccinini's suggestion that chords, e.g. like
this
---
-0-
---
-3-
-2-
-0-
be played by striking the courses in the order 5/p, 2/i ,1/m, 3/i.
Then there also is the other strange thing in his
Does it have anything to do with The Orbo? (cf. Kapsperger)
Peter Nightingale [EMAIL PROTECTED] schrieb:
Dear list,
Is there a rationale for Piccinini's suggestion that chords, e.g. like
this
---
-0-
---
-3-
-2-
-0-
be played by striking the courses in the order 5/p, 2/i ,1/m, 3/i.
Then
Peter,
--- Peter Nightingale [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Dear list,
Is there a rationale for Piccinini's suggestion that
chords, e.g. like
this
---
-0-
---
-3-
-2-
-0-
be played by striking the courses in the order 5/p,
2/i ,1/m, 3/i.
This is what most people call a Kapsperger
I'm sure he preferred the sound. Whether he himself, or others,
adhered to the instructions religiously is another matter.
He certainly qualifies as an expert.
dt
At 10:43 AM 7/22/2008, you wrote:
Does it have anything to do with The Orbo? (cf. Kapsperger)
Peter Nightingale [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I think Peachy falls into the very picky category. Hard to ignore
the first responders.
dt
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On Tue, 22 Jul 2008, David Tayler wrote:
I think Peachy falls into the very picky category.
Peachy Ninny? Well, that might explain it all.
Hard to ignore the first responders.
Do you mean that he is on life support? Or do you think that those first
responders who were talking about
On Jul 22, 2008, at 5:29 PM, David Tayler wrote:
I think Peachy falls into the very picky category. Hard to ignore
the first responders.
Indulge me some room to babble a bit about Merle Travis here. I
personally think that Merle Travis did the same for American country
music in the 1930's
I think David R's point about Merle is not only exactly right but has
a broader sense as well, which is that every odd thing we see in
paintings, pcures, etc is reflected in popular music--including
everything popular, that is.
Thumbs hanging over, two fingerd technique, the list goes on and
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