"Bach's Well-tempered Clavier wasn't the first major musical work designed to demonstrate the advantages of an equitable, scientific approach to intonation. Vincenzo Galilei's Libro d'intavolature di liuto was published in 1584, a hefty collection of pieces composed for lute, some of which demonstrate the instrument's capability to transpose pieces to any pitch of the well-tempered scale. Galilei was a polymath who approached the study of music with scientific zeal, and his best-known son was the astronomer Galileo. The technical difficulties involved in playing these pieces have led some academics to suggest that Galilei's intentions were purely theoretical."
Available on CD: Vincenzo Galilei: The Well-tempered Lute Žak Osmo (lute) (Hyperion)
Available on CD: Vincenzo Galilei: The Well-tempered Lute Žak Osmo (lute) (Hyperion)
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