Originally posted by Nick Armstrong
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Alphabet Associations - III
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Originally posted by french frank View PostSt. Ap me vitals! The menu is nominally a big clue. Nearly as big as a picture of him with his name engraved round the edge!
I might add it's a hard nut to crack.
Is it Christophe Le Menu de Saint-Philbert?Last edited by AuntDaisy; 09-12-23, 09:07.
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Congratulations, Aunt D - Saint-Philbert was the 'hard nut to crack'
So the 'not wholly different' composers are three saints:
1. Saint-Saëns began his famous Carnaval des animaux with a lionisation: the Royal March of the Lions
2. Le Chevalier de Saint-Georges was not in fact an Englishman, sir! and should perhaps should have been a knight of Saint-Denis.
3) The hardest nut to crack was Christophe Le Menu de Saint-Philbert, more of a publicist/publisher, but he knocked out a cantata or two, especially the short ones known as cantatailles.
Number three was the desperated add-on. I discovered him so I thought he would be easier to find. Who's for T? Tapiola? Aunt Daisy? Or a volunteer with a good idea?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 french frank View PostCongratulations, Aunt D - Saint-Philbert was the 'hard nut to crack'
So the 'not wholly different' composers are three saints:
1. Saint-Saëns began his famous Carnaval des animaux with a lionisation: the Royal March of the Lions
2. Le Chevalier de Saint-Georges was not in fact an Englishman, sir! and should perhaps should have been a knight of Saint-Denis.
3) The hardest nut to crack was Christophe Le Menu de Saint-Philbert, more of a publicist/publisher, but he knocked out a cantata or two, especially the short ones known as cantatailles.
Number three was the desperated add-on. I discovered him so I thought he would be easier to find. Who's for T? Tapiola? Aunt Daisy? Or a volunteer with a good idea?
I have a T if Tapiola or a volunteer doesn't mind...
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
3) The hardest nut to crack was Christophe Le Menu de Saint-Philbert, more of a publicist/publisher, but he knocked out a cantata or two, especially the short ones known as cantatailles.[/FONT]
Number three was the desperated add-on. I discovered him so I thought he would be easier to find. Who's for T? Tapiola? Aunt Daisy? Or a volunteer with a good idea?
Originally posted by french frank View PostHe is a Sainte rather than a Saint.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post
oi! Bad form supplying misinformation halfway through -
hardly slept last night...
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 french frank View Post
A misapprehension? My comment was a direct reply to Lord Gould who had suggested Monsieur de Sainte-Colombe (a Sainte), not to Saint-Philbert.
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Originally posted by Tapiola View PostI am T-less, so go for it, AuntDaisy.
Which sedate T now omits Kirby Muxloe & Armley Moor, but, in 1936, was a rapid post-day jaunt, and exactly a century earlier included, in time, three quarters of Vienna to Břeclav?
Can you name the three composers & two writers?
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Originally posted by AuntDaisy View PostThanks Tapiola.
Which sedate T now omits Kirby Muxloe & Armley Moor, but, in 1936, was a rapid post-day jaunt, and exactly a century earlier included, in time, three quarters of Vienna to Břeclav?
Can you name the three composers & two writers?
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Originally posted by hmvman View PostI'm thinking the sedate T is 'The Slow Train' by Flanders & Swann but hit the buffers after that!Originally posted by hmvman View PostAh, if the T is train, is the 1936 post-day jaunt 'Night Mail' by Auden with music by Britten?
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