Originally posted by doversoul
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Music in 18th-century Newcastle.
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Originally posted by Old Grumpy View PostDovers, Newcastle is not off the beaten track - it was a major staging post on the journey between London and Edinburgh, as was made clear in the programme. Charles Avison and his music are well known to us in the North East. I agree, an excellent programme.
OG
As an aside, I have always wondered why : ale : has the handle to the left and : ela : has the handle to the right - something sinister going on there...
[For the record - in case you see it, OG: : ale : was pinched from the old BBC board and I invented :ela : as the reverse because it fitted better with Mere whimsy - ff]
OG
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostTalking of Keels, A bit off topic,well completely off topic actually and even the wrong century,but interesting nontheless, is the history of professional rowing in The C19 on the Tyne , as well as the Thames and other major rivers.
More or less forgotten now,some of these guys were major celebrities of a sport that spanned the empire.
HUge crowds were common on the Tyne. There was even a town in Canada named after one of the best Rowers.
Big prizes were up for grabs, which ,when doing some work on this, I calculated to be at least £100k in todays value.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/tyne/features/r...ghistory.shtml
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