Originally posted by MrGongGong
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Regional accents- the last straw.
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Originally posted by Mary Chambers View PostPhonetic pronunciation.
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostYou were stalking me. I was your victim on a course in the early 90s.
You weren't the teacher who said "But's that's not composition, that's just making collections of sounds you like and arranging them into patterns"
were you?
(To which the answer was something about Debussy)
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostWith an f?
You weren't the teacher who said "But's that's not composition, that's just making collections of sounds you like and arranging them into patterns"
were you?
(To which the answer was something about Debussy)
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostI've always thought I had no accent - sort of RP with a hint of Croydon. Someone once told me I sounded like Dan Cruickshank the BBC's go-to architecture documentary man. Same age as me.
She then promptly ruined my tiny moment of glory by then declaring that she thought 'Scotch' accents sounded 'ebsolutely 'orrid'.
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostA gorgeous young lady once told me I sounded like Sean Connery ...
She then promptly ruined my tiny moment of glory by then declaring that she thought 'Scotch' accents sounded 'ebsolutely 'orrid'.
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For some reason the East Anglian accent causes performers problems. I can still - unfortunately - remember Jane Horrocks in a TV adaptation of Arnold Wesker's 'Roots' which was clearly set in Norfolk, in which she sounded as if she'd just got off the lane from Sydney. Alan Bates couldn't manage it in 'The Go-Between'. The closest anybody came, I think, was 'The Singing Postman', who came from Birmingham.
The other night we watched our DVD of 'Albert Herring' in which - possibly at the suggestion of Peter Hall - the cast adopted a generic 'country folk' manner of speaking which managed to sound vaguely authentic without upsetting any of us simple folk in these parts.
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Originally posted by muzzer View PostThese days I’m more offended by the inability to place stresses on the correct syllable than the accent of the speaker. I’m looking at you, Ben Brown of BBC News, and your colleague Lukwesa Burak, possibly the highest-profile offenders, though there are plenty of others.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostFor some reason the East Anglian accent causes performers problems. I can still - unfortunately - remember Jane Horrocks in a TV adaptation of Arnold Wesker's 'Roots' which was clearly set in Norfolk, in which she sounded as if she'd just got off the lane from Sydney. Alan Bates couldn't manage it in 'The Go-Between'. The closest anybody came, I think, was 'The Singing Postman', who came from Birmingham.
The other night we watched our DVD of 'Albert Herring' in which - possibly at the suggestion of Peter Hall - the cast adopted a generic 'country folk' manner of speaking which managed to sound vaguely authentic without upsetting any of us simple folk in these parts.
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