I'm not immediately sure about the opening "Prelude"(?), but the following Allemande, Courante, Sarabande and Gigue are known, from Res. F 844 (Paris Bibliotheque Nationale). I played them back in the mid '80's. A somewhat modern transcription can be found in "R. De Visee oeuvres completes pour guitare" by Robert Strizich, Le Pupitre no. 15 (1978).
lovely interpetation to this lovely suite!!! (in the "manuscrit de Vaudry de Saizenay" it's for theorbo (in D major) for a "normal" theorbo in A, but for a "théorbe de pièces" in D it's in G major). congrtulations!
im sure its in the correct tuning... it might not resonate at that low of tension perhaps. there is good reason its set where it is. it was handled by a master luthier im sure its in tip top shape...
+northofthesun please watch the Sonic Geometry video here on RUclips, retune your instrument to A=432 Hz and play it for a day... then come back and tell me again that there is a good reason for having it tuned to A=440.
+drollroll i get that 432 is probably a great pitch but it might not work with the instrument and the strings. those are real cats guts on that guitar. not nylon. and there is no way to adjust the tension in the neck to set it where it wouldnt buzz. plus 440 is the standard. also the luthier has reset it to its original baroque setting 4 doubled strings and one high e. im sure 432 would be beautiful, but perhaps not possible to achieve succesfully on this particular guitar. i concure with you that 432 is probably glorious on an instrument such as this
I'm not immediately sure about the opening "Prelude"(?), but the following Allemande, Courante, Sarabande and Gigue are known, from Res. F 844 (Paris Bibliotheque Nationale). I played them back in the mid '80's. A somewhat modern transcription can be found in "R. De Visee oeuvres completes pour guitare" by Robert Strizich, Le Pupitre no. 15 (1978).
This guitar has an intersting tone, typical for that epoch. To hear a Stradivari guitar is a very special thing anyway.
Genuinely lovely 🌹
Sumptuous🎼🎶🙏💗
lovely interpetation to this lovely suite!!!
(in the "manuscrit de Vaudry de Saizenay" it's for theorbo (in D major) for a "normal" theorbo in A, but for a "théorbe de pièces" in D it's in G major).
congrtulations!
I love this suite so much! Where can the original tablature be found?
VERY GOOD!
complimenti,
This piece has a whole different life compared to the piece in D on Therobo. Both are fantastic and have their own character.
This guitar was not made for the A=440 concert pitch. It probably sounds heavenly in A=432 Hz
im sure its in the correct tuning... it might not resonate at that low of tension perhaps. there is good reason its set where it is. it was handled by a master luthier im sure its in tip top shape...
+northofthesun please watch the Sonic Geometry video here on RUclips, retune your instrument to A=432 Hz and play it for a day... then come back and tell me again that there is a good reason for having it tuned to A=440.
+drollroll i get that 432 is probably a great pitch but it might not work with the instrument and the strings. those are real cats guts on that guitar. not nylon. and there is no way to adjust the tension in the neck to set it where it wouldnt buzz. plus 440 is the standard. also the luthier has reset it to its original baroque setting 4 doubled strings and one high e. im sure 432 would be beautiful, but perhaps not possible to achieve succesfully on this particular guitar. i concure with you that 432 is probably glorious on an instrument such as this
+northofthesun you can experience it by retuning the track using Audacity. I did and it sounds super.
+drollroll i will attempt that.. check out the one where esglund performs tarantula on it.. and thank u!
Si può suonare "Il Padrino" su questo strumento?
bravo!
This guitar sounds like a kantele 😃