Originally posted by french frank
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Clipping the wings of VW's skylark ....
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Originally posted by Northender View PostVivian Ellis's 'Flying Scot' will, with immediate effect, be replaced by a single diesel rail car offering a shuttle service between London Euston and Watford Junction.
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Originally posted by cloughie View Post
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostI see that on Flora Day yesterday Cornwall received due recognition - maybe the influence of Helston boy Petroc Trelawny.
[However, I'm fairly sure it was Louis Lortie who played Beethoven Op27/2 (part of), not Louis Lorti.]It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by salymap View PostWsn't that used as sig tunefor'Paul Temple' ? Margery Westbury et al....I loved that programme.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostAnd I'm happy to be set right by the website, since I always referred to the piece (incorrectly?) as the Floral Dance (no cracks about Bristol, please ). However, I was under the impression that the song itself was called The Floral Dance. Was this (i.e. the one played on Breakfast) a different piece from the one played by the Brighouse and Rastrick BB which 'charted' in 1977?
[However, I'm fairly sure it was Louis Lortie who played Beethoven Op27/2 (part of), not Louis Lorti.]
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Originally posted by aeolium View PostDo you really mean that, sc? Grossly disproportionate, surely.
PS I noticed that The Wasps buzzed around Breakfast again this morning (I believe the Overture is now in double figures for the year), as well as yet another Schubert Impromptu and the almost daily dose of J Strauss II.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostThe Floral Dance is same piece but the Helston Band version of it is the original arrangement as played on Flora Day leading the dance around the town, whereas the B&R version is a more robust arrangement. As a Yorkshireman living in Cornwall I like them both!
Incidentally, volumes 9 & 10 are the two where most of the piano arrangements are by my avatar and not by Sharp.
There were famous recordings of Katie Moss's song by Peter Dawson and Terry Wogan.
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostThere were famous recordings of Katie Moss's song by Peter Dawson and Terry Wogan.
Thanks to cloughie for the additional info.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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amateur51
Originally posted by salymap View PostMy recording of the Floral Dance is sung by the great Russian bass,Oscar Natzka, New Zealand born.
He died at only 39 in 1951 but I acquired a wonderful CD of 24songs and arias. I saw him at the RAH too.
Off topic, but does anyone remember him?
Listening to this, I'm very glad to have made his acquaintance
Oscar Natzka (1912-1951)A curious and ultimately sad case among 20th century basses is that of Oscar Natzka (originally Natzke), who would undoubtedly be bet...
Most appropriate for this evening's journey home, eh Caliban?
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Hautboiste
Way back when the Helston Furry Dance was part of the Grade I (or possibly Grade 2) National Dancing syllabus of the Imperial Society of Teachers of Dancing. I spent many a happy hour after school crashing around the dance studio.
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Originally posted by Hautboiste View PostWay back when the Helston Furry Dance was part of the Grade I (or possibly Grade 2) National Dancing syllabus of the Imperial Society of Teachers of Dancing. I spent many a happy hour after school crashing around the dance studio.
There are some wonderful titles – Lumps of Plum Pudding springs to mind as a menu that doesn't quite bring in the diners. Footy Agen the Wa’ might have been a pre-Alex Ferguson training session, and Bung Your Eye was obviously a term of encouragement uttered during the same.
Uncontrolled binges are nothing new. Saturday Night and Sunday Morn, Hey Boys, Up Go We, The Juice off Barley, Gramarchree is a Sup of Good Drink, The Pleasures of the Town, We Won’t Go Home Until Morning, The Merry, Merry Milkmaids, Every Lad His Lass, Maiden Lane, Fourpence Half-Penny Farthing, Touch and Take, Nancy’s Fancy, Fain I Would, Catching of Fleas, Melancholy Martin, and Ten Pound Lass all combine to tell a tale just as familiar now, although then it was more often followed by Haste To The Wedding.
Not everyone joined in – Dull Sir John – although The Friar and the Nun can be read in different ways and Rufty Tufty might have been involved.
Best of all, though, I understand that police from Operation Yewtree are investigating The Collier’s Daughter or the Duke of Rutland’s Delight. About time, too.
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