It would be interesting to see the ULM version of the Branle de Bocan.
The Chancy series of branles begins with the title "Branles de Boccan",
and the second one in the set is titled (fittingly enough) "Second".
So I think of it as a variation on the first. After that comes Branle
G
On 12/01/2011 17:39, Chris Despopoulos wrote:
Always one to toot my own horn (or pluck my own strings, as it were), I
have posted some recordings on my personal site at:
[1]http://cudspan.net/baroque/
Very nice Chris. Chancy's music is a lot more sophisticated or more
'modern' t
Always one to toot my own horn (or pluck my own strings, as it were), I
have posted some recordings on my personal site at:
[1]http://cudspan.net/baroque/
Two tracks are some old recordings I did on the mandore, and three
others are on the baroque guitar... I keep meaning to do bett
On 12/01/2011 16:35, Nelson, Jocelyn wrote:
Certainly nothing wrong with dances and ballad tunes, as you demonstrate.
Is the tuning similar to the 4-course?
I'm not familiar with mandore literature, and now I'm looking forward to
learning more about it.
JN
Jean-Marie Poirier has a site dev
Certainly nothing wrong with dances and ballad tunes, as you demonstrate.
Is the tuning similar to the 4-course?
I'm not familiar with mandore literature, and now I'm looking forward to
learning more about it.
JN
On 1/11/2011 2:34 PM, "Stuart Walsh" wrote:
>On 11/01/2011 01:48, Nelson, J