Category:Ganassi-type recorders
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Further reading
[edit]- Adrian Brown. "Ganassi" recorders. Recorder types, AdrianBrown.org."In 2004 I first gave a lecture entitled "The Ganassi Recorder - Separating the Facts from Fiction" and the subsequent article that followed this was published in German in Tibia, and recently in English in The American Recorder magazine. The research I undertook into the phenomenon of the "Ganassi" recorder led me to the conclusion that there had never been in the renaissance, a separate "tribe" of "Ganassi" recorders and the instrument as we know it today, had been more or less invented in the 1970's.by several makers working independently, the Morgan model achieving fame because it was the most copied by other makers. This design was based on one instrument in the Vienna Kunsthistorisches museum: inventory number SAM 135. This instrument was later found to be part of a small recorder consort and seems never to have been the evolutionary "missing link" between renaissance and baroque recorders as had been previously thought."
Media in category "Ganassi-type recorders"
The following 5 files are in this category, out of 5 total.
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08-Ganassi-type-alto-recorder-by-Fred-Morgan-photo-by-Oscar-Romero.jpg 1,000 × 1,500; 679 KB
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09-Ganassi-type-alto-recorder-by-Bob-Marvin-photo-by-Oscar-Romero.jpg 1,000 × 1,500; 620 KB
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10-Ganassi-type-alto-recorder-by-Bob-Marvin-side-view-photo-by-Oscar-Romero.jpg 1,000 × 1,500; 610 KB
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12-Ganassi-type-alto-recorder-by-Monika-Musch-photo-by-Oscar-Romero.jpg 1,000 × 1,500; 648 KB
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16-Ganassi-type-alto-recorder-detail-by-Bob-Marvin-photo-by-Oscar-Romero.jpg 1,000 × 1,500; 325 KB