Hi!
It would be fantastic if you can send me that list of British one handed flutes
from archaeological contexts.
I you can find it, I would apreciated. Thanks a lot to everyone who answered!
--- El mar, 3/3/09, KENNETH HAMILTON <KenHamilton@...> escribió:
De: KENNETH HAMILTON <KenHamilton@...>
Asunto: Re: [tabor_n_pipe] Earliest Depiction
Para: tabor_n_pipe@yahoogroups.com
Fecha: martes, 3 marzo, 2009 9:49
There are plenty of earlier three hole pipes, dating from the medieval back to
the Iron Age, but of course this does not mean they were played together with a
tabor! Plenty of Greek and Roman iconography showing two three hole pipes played
together.
I used to have a list of British one handed flutes from archaeological contexts.
I f there is interest, I could see if I can find it.
Ken
--- On Mon, 2/3/09, weeksjonathan@ rocketmail. com <weeksjonathan@ rocketmail.
com> wrote:
From: weeksjonathan@ rocketmail. com <weeksjonathan@ rocketmail. com>
Subject: [tabor_n_pipe] Earliest Depiction
To: tabor_n_pipe@ yahoogroups. com
Date: Monday, 2 March, 2009, 7:20 PM
The earliest depiction of a pipe and tabor is, according to Jeremy
Montagu, the Misericord In Exeter Cathedral which seems to date from
c1230, ie about 40 years before Lincoln. Both these depictions however
appear to show a pipe of flabiol type due to girth and position of
hands. The roughly contemorary deer bone pipe from White Castle is
also of this type, in other words it can be played either with one or
two hands. There is little evidence of the modern type of three hole
pipe before the 15c.
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