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6 Renaissance Dances
Per Nielsen Matthias Janz Lyrics


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Comments from YouTube:

@labananiere

Fort beau concert, fort belle musique, le tout accompagné de fort beaux costumes... Bravo!

@timo201282

The style of music that me and my recently died good fried LOVED!!!! R.I.P Micheal.... I hope you can listen to that pieces wherever you are........

@heavnnnsent

I went out into the neighborhood in my car and blasted this really loud. But nobody complained.

@alexandradeuen1610

Der Klang, der soundtrack eines Lebens im Glück, heitere wundervolle Melodien,

@hinakomalin

Wunderbar!!! Great version! Thumbs up from a Malaysian!

@Korea4Me

I blasted up the speakers this morning and woke everybody up with this wonderful music!

@madaraszi

four recorders (i guess soprano-alto-tenor and bass) a lute four viola da gambas (bass, tenor, alto and soprano ) a double bass (to tell the truth this a bit anachronistic as a renaissance instrument, but only a little bit: the sub-contrabass viola da gamba has the same tuning of it's strings as the double-bass percussion (i don't know exactly the type)

@yttreblemaker

Absolutely wonderful performance. For mid-16th Century, this WAS cutting-edge pop music. Two consorts used, recorders and viols. (And obligatory percussion.) And they're using renaissance recorders, not baroque ones. The renaissance ones were louder, had a larger tone column and were more or less meant to be played outside. The only "?????" I had was the use of a modern double-bass to reinforce the bottom lines for the strings. Why??? Accurate costumes, and the lead viol player (the guy on the right side with the Shakespearean haircut and goatee) is an accurate representation of a medieval musician as there ever was. Viols were interesting. They were fretted, like a guitar, with more strings, and wider necks. A different approach to playing than on today's violins. Susato churned out tons of "dance music", which is what this is. The embellishments (filling in more notes and "showing off") was completely acceptable and almost expected in this period. Hardest job? The poor guy fourth from the left, playing bass recorder. That thing took so much air and had very little resistance - kind of like blowing through a 2-inch piece of kitchen plumbing. But it was important and necessary to complete the harmonies. And to some of the commentaries below, no crumhorns, cornamuses or sackbuts were used or harmed in the making of this video.

@alexandradeuen1610

Ein Traum von Musik! Renaissancemusik glänzt ,funkelt zeitlos wie ein edelsteinmosaik ,

@Korea4Me

Susato ROCKS!!

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