I'm pretty picky about performances of this piece - but this guy is one of the best I ever heard. Extremely musical and articulate, and, as another comment says, "intelligent as heck."
I life study Ed McTier AKA Blind Willie McTell,I believe he used a lute vahuela tuning a d g b e g with a reentrant bass d almost drone.Thank You Old Chris a retired fiddler of Albuquerque NM
The first color movies didn't start in 1933, color/colorized movies actually started in the 1900's when movies were produced in a colored print, KinemaColor, Brewster Colour, Etc, Etc, and Technicolor didn't start in 1932, it actually started in 1915-1916 when a man invented Technicolor.
Dank voor dit filmpje. Als Eindhovenaar vind ik het fijn om bewust te zijn van de koperen stenen. Ik zag ze eerder nooit.... Gek dat ze dit niet op school hebben geleerd. Heb je deze muziek zelf gemaakt, of komt het ergens vandaan?
Beautiful rendition on a beautiful instrument. There is a couple called the "Luteduo" who play a lovely arrangement for Baroque guitar and Theorbo to found on RU-vid as well. The comments here really tickle me. I see no reason to choose sides - there is no side to choose. Every instrument has a place and so does every musician and every genre. There's no sense trying to compare them or in insisting one is better than the other. You'd be surprised at how many of these musicians play multiple genres and on multiple instruments. They all have their place, their beauty, and all require a lot of skill and a lot of hours spent trying to master them.
How complicated. Never would have thought that’s how they did it. It is surprising that colour technology ever took off due to amount of time to produce the film and export. Interesting I saw on a yt video that the first section of wizard of oz was filmed in colour not sepia. The set was coloured sepia so that Dorothy could walk out into a colour world.
One use that would become frequent as characteristic of the first baroque was the use of voice or solo voices and continuous bass, especially accompanied by theorbos, as it happens here.
Cornett is an instrument that is renaissance in origin. It is made from bone , fingered like a Recorder but has a mouthpiece similar to a trumpet. The resulting sound is what you hear,, and thick nasal sound but with fluidity in playing. It was the late David Munrow that is responsible for the ressurgence of interest in these instruments and for the interest in period performance!