
Lute - Wikipedia
During the Baroque music era, the lute was used as one of the instruments that played the basso continuo accompaniment parts. It is also an accompanying instrument in vocal works.
Lute (Baroque) – Early Music Instrument Database
Lute (Baroque) The lute did not change a great deal from the Renaissance to the baroque. In fact, some of the best Renaissance instruments were modified to better fit the musical requirements of baroque music.
History of lute-family instruments - Wikipedia
Over the course of the Baroque era the lute was increasingly relegated to the continuo accompaniment, and was eventually superseded in that role by keyboard instruments. The lute almost fell out of use after 1800.
SO YOU WANT TO PLAY A BAROQUE LUTE? - polyhymnion.org
SO YOU WANT TO PLAY A BAROQUE LUTE? The 13-course Baroque Lute is an instrument of beauty and refinement, possessing some of the most beautiful soloistic literature among all the plucked stringed instruments.
BAROQUE - Mateus Lutes
The two main representatives of the Baroque lute, used in the performance of lute music written between 1650-1780s, are the 11 course and the 13 course lutes. The most prolific and notable composer for the baroque lute was Silvius Leopold Weiss (1686-1750), a contemporary of J.S. Bach (1685-1750).
Lute | Musical Instrument & History of the Stringed Instrument
Feb 21, 2025 · In Europe, lute refers to a plucked stringed musical instrument popular in the 16th and 17th centuries. The lute that was prominent in European popular art and music of the Renaissance and Baroque periods originated as the Arab ʿūd.
What is a Lute? - Lute Society of America
Lutenists typically play music drawn from the repertory of the Medieval, Renaissance, or Baroque periods. Over time, the lute has amassed an extensive and unique literature, primarily by composers who were themselves lute players.
About the Lute - Lute Society
The Baroque lute produced two major schools of composition; in mid-seventeenth century France where the Gaultiers, Dufault, de Visée and others created a stately and self-assured style of music; and in early eighteenth century Germany, where Bach wrote for the lute, and the last great lutenist, Sylvius Leopold Weiss wrote suites of preludes ...
Baroque Lutes - Niskanen Lutes
A deep-bodied baroque lute that can be built with 11 courses, or with 13 courses with a short extension (bass-rider), or with 13 courses with long extension (swan neck). Pitch: e' or f', String length: 70 cm
Baroque Lute - Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra & Chorale
The instrument now called the “baroque lute” is essentially a form of lute known to have been widely used during the baroque era. In order to understand the baroque lute, the instrument should be discussed in connection with two related instruments, the earlier theorbo and a contemporary called the archlute.
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