No video

"Fantasia Seconda" by Giovanni Antonio Terzi

This is Giovanni Antonio Terzi's second fantasy from his "Intavolatura di liutto, libro primo" (1593). This is a single-take home recording done with an iPhone and an external microphone.
A special thank you to my Patreon supporters:
Vanessa Green
D. Martin
Chris Hatchell
Jack Haefner
Miqbri
A link to my Patreon: / fundamentalsofluteplaying
My book for intermediate and advanced players, published by Mel Bay: www.google.com/search?client=...

Пікірлер: 23

  • @vanessagreen3986
    @vanessagreen3986Ай бұрын

    Wonderful!

  • @SanchezComposer
    @SanchezComposerАй бұрын

    Beautiful performance, Laudon!

  • @laudonschuett3019

    @laudonschuett3019

    Ай бұрын

    Thank you so much, Paul!

  • @user-tv1ey1uc3r
    @user-tv1ey1uc3rАй бұрын

    That is such a soothing sound.

  • @laudonschuett3019

    @laudonschuett3019

    Ай бұрын

    @@user-tv1ey1uc3r thank you : )

  • @dtrumpster
    @dtrumpster29 күн бұрын

    AMAZING, beautiful Laudon!!

  • @laudonschuett3019

    @laudonschuett3019

    29 күн бұрын

    @@dtrumpster thank you so much! : )

  • @jameslouder
    @jameslouderАй бұрын

    That's a really fine piece, Laudon. I must look into Terzi more deeply--thanks!

  • @laudonschuett3019

    @laudonschuett3019

    Ай бұрын

    @@jameslouder it’s great music : )

  • @miqbri
    @miqbriАй бұрын

    Beautifully played :) You really are one with the instrument. Have you ever talked about when or how have you decided on focusing on the 6c lute in particular in any of your videos?

  • @laudonschuett3019

    @laudonschuett3019

    Ай бұрын

    @@miqbri thank you so much! Honestly, the primary reason I have focused on 6 course is because of money. I come from a poor background and I just haven’t been able to save up for more instruments. I had a theorbo once that I had to sell for medical insurance. Luckily, things are getting better and I am hoping to get a nice 8 course next! : )

  • @miqbri

    @miqbri

    Ай бұрын

    @@laudonschuett3019 I was expecting something along the line of it historically aligning with your favorite repertoire or the 'purity of it' but that sounds like as good of a practical reason as any. Quality lutes sure look expensive. I look forward to you comparing the two in the future!

  • @laudonschuett3019

    @laudonschuett3019

    Ай бұрын

    @@miqbri I will definitely do that! Yes, I am a firm believer in being practical. I love the idea of owning lots of instruments, but you do what you can with what you have : ) I do make some small changes to the instrument when playing different repertoires. For example, if I am playing early repertoire (Dalza, Spinacino, etc.), I tune the lute up to A=440 and then I put an octave on my 4th course. Most of the repertoire in the early part of the 16th century was written for A lute and had octave stringing, so that gets it a little closer to the sound world : ) Cheers!

  • @kraftwerk974
    @kraftwerk974Ай бұрын

    Magnifique

  • @laudonschuett3019

    @laudonschuett3019

    Ай бұрын

    Thank you so much!

  • @hansekin
    @hansekinАй бұрын

    In addition to being a great man, a talented musician, an indomitable polemicist, ours shows off his universalistic knowledge of ancient and contemporary idioms, a brilliant example of a cultural uniqueness story is the use of the lemma PAVAI (why not PAVAY?), instead of obsolete and unsightly PAVANA. We will immediately change the dictionaries, vocabularies and musical manuals of the peninsula in favor of the incomparable intuitions of our musical genius, of the incomparable Albionic philologist.

  • @laudonschuett3019

    @laudonschuett3019

    Ай бұрын

    @@hansekin there is my little piglet! I was getting worried about you. You mentioned you were so much older than me and I feared that you went and got lost in the woods or maybe a big bad wolf got you, but no, here you are safe and sound. I ruminated on your advice and have decided that you are right. I will quit music and choose a new profession. I have decided to become a truffle hunter and you can be my little truffle sniffer, my piglet. I can already see you marching in front of me with your little snout and whiskers pushed into the dirt, searching for those delicious morsels! What do you think, my dearest?! I think we would make quite the team

  • @vanessagreen3986
    @vanessagreen3986Ай бұрын

    Wow Terzi wrote this when he was 13 and he died when he was 40. I better scrape the gum off my shoes and get this lute learned!

  • @laudonschuett3019

    @laudonschuett3019

    Ай бұрын

    😂😂😂oh typos! I will fix it. I don’t think we really know his dates. Thanks for catching : )

  • @vanessagreen3986

    @vanessagreen3986

    Ай бұрын

    @@laudonschuett3019ha! I seriously thought those were the correct dates and then began to get that horrible sense of lack of accomplishments and anguish in general lol

  • @laudonschuett3019

    @laudonschuett3019

    Ай бұрын

    @@vanessagreen3986 LOL I'm sure he was excellent at a young age but it would surprise me if he was under 20 when that first book was published. It is considered some of the most difficult Renaissance lute music to play so he must have been a monster, though!

  • @vanessagreen3986

    @vanessagreen3986

    Ай бұрын

    @@laudonschuett3019yes! This in and of itself is INTENSE! I am curious about the type of training these types of composers underwent. I imagine some musician priests training them and learning to sing polyphony in the Catholic Church

  • @laudonschuett3019

    @laudonschuett3019

    Ай бұрын

    @@vanessagreen3986 Certainly the great madrigal, motet, and mass composers cut their teeth in the churches (Catholic, Anglican, etc.), which had an excellent history of training vocal composers going back Guido and beyond. For lutenists, we don't know a ton about the average apprenticeship in the 16th century, but if they were like other instrumentalists it would be a 7-9 year apprenticeship with a master (usually starting at a young age), then a jouneymanship of 2-3 years training with a bunch of different masters. Finally, you would presumably write and perform your "masterwork" and then be a master yourself. Often the career was familial like with John Johnson and his son, Robert so not only were there trade secrets but secrets held between family members. It's quite interesting!