English people of that time had a weird way to spell dances' names! Doesn't feel like a sarabande to me anyway, with this walking bass in the first part. Is the title a later addition by an editor perhaps? Well played anyway!
I am actually still confused by that first part of the piece 😂 the second part is much more like a common Sarabande. I am sure I have seen other English Sarabands with that notation though. I wonder if it should be played more inegale, like a dotted note pattern. I need to experiment more. Or Sarabandes were conceived differently in England at the time. Or someone made a 'collage' between two pieces. I need to investigate. I think that a lot of people didn't really care about spelling back in the day, they just wrote it like it felt like. It could be a typo, or at some point a typo started the whole SarabRand thing.. quite a few of them around.. just like some 'Almonds' 😂
This sounds like music sent to heal.
It soothes my soul.
Very good! 👍🏻
Thank you from Vienna.
English people of that time had a weird way to spell dances' names! Doesn't feel like a sarabande to me anyway, with this walking bass in the first part. Is the title a later addition by an editor perhaps? Well played anyway!
I am actually still confused by that first part of the piece 😂 the second part is much more like a common Sarabande. I am sure I have seen other English Sarabands with that notation though. I wonder if it should be played more inegale, like a dotted note pattern. I need to experiment more. Or Sarabandes were conceived differently in England at the time. Or someone made a 'collage' between two pieces. I need to investigate.
I think that a lot of people didn't really care about spelling back in the day, they just wrote it like it felt like. It could be a typo, or at some point a typo started the whole SarabRand thing.. quite a few of them around.. just like some 'Almonds' 😂