Originally posted by richardfinegold
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Nipper’s coming home on Friday
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Originally posted by smittims View PostI was saddened to look into the Manchester branch recently, where there used to be a large room, behind glass doors, and wholly dedicated to classical CDs (this was at the end of the last century) now there's about five feet of shelf space and much of it is pop dressed up as 'classical'.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostRound here a 'nipper' is a junior assistant, e.g. the lad who works with the plumber, brickie, carpenter et al.
Warships during the age of sail carried a surprisingly large number of children. It was perfectly normal for the five to six hundred compliment of a ship of the line to include fifty or more ship’s boys. They appear in the muster books as either officer’s servant or as ordinary seamen. Admiralty regulations for Royal Navy ships stated that they should be at least thirteen years old, unless they were sons accompanying their fathers, in which case the limit was eleven. But like many such rules it
… and by extension, a general slang alternative for ‘kid’ in many places. “Ay when I were a nipper…”"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by Nick Armstrong View Post
A naval term originally…
Warships during the age of sail carried a surprisingly large number of children. It was perfectly normal for the five to six hundred compliment of a ship of the line to include fifty or more ship’s boys. They appear in the muster books as either officer’s servant or as ordinary seamen. Admiralty regulations for Royal Navy ships stated that they should be at least thirteen years old, unless they were sons accompanying their fathers, in which case the limit was eleven. But like many such rules it
… and by extension, a general slang alternative for ‘kid’ in many places. “Ay when I were a nipper…”
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Originally posted by smittims View PostI was saddened to look into the Manchester branch recently, where there used to be a large room, behind glass doors, and wholly dedicated to classical CDs (this was at the end of the last century) now there's about five feet of shelf space and much of it is pop dressed up as 'classical'.
There were good things on that HMV label, but it was limited to the EMI catalogue and well-trodden repertoire. I assume it is now defunct (as indeed is Swindon as a shopping centre). I have three discs from that label, all good.
Gershwin with Previn/LSO - Rhapsody in Blue, An American in Paris, Piano Concerto
A disc including two classics recordings - Vier letzte Lieder, Popp/Tennstedt, Wesendonck Baker/Boult.
Boult in VW favourites - Greensleeves Fantasia, The Lark Ascending, Serenade to Music, Tallis Fantasia
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Originally posted by Jonathan View PostI went into the York branch recently, there were several metres of shelf space, mostly taken up with their own label released but a fair amount of other discs too. Most of the others were more "crossover" or artist based.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostI looked at my 'Good CD guide' for 1995 this morning, which listed 23 Blue Riband specialist classical dealers in London alone. Sic Transit gloria mundi.
Bah! One of them was called "Pastoral Records". I googled that and it took me to the Bristol archive of diocesan and and parochial records. I take it that mean it doesn't exist nowLast edited by french frank; 23-11-23, 15:39.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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