Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte
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Alphabet Associations - II
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This is a sticky topic.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post- and the Colle Sllaw, please?
Jonathan Lloyd composed Airs and Graces (1987) and Don't Mention the War (1982).
William Lloyd Webber composed Songs of Spring and was the father of Andrew Lloyd Webber.
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Originally posted by subcontrabass View PostGeorge Lloyd served on H M S Trinidad in the Arctic convoy and composed the ship's march.
[Jonathan Lloyd composed Airs and Graces (1987) and Don't Mention the War (1982).
William Lloyd Webber composed Songs of Spring and was the father of Andrew Lloyd Webber.
- a fuLL house, subby. Looking forward to your machinations![FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by edashtav View PostI'm puzzled! I've rejected the following "near misses": Myaskovsky (failed on operas); M. Weinberg ( failed on concertini); Maconchy (failed on operas); G.Macfarren ( too many operas, too few concertini) and Milhaud ( exhausted my ability to count!) .... HELP!
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Originally posted by subcontrabass View PostAccording to information that I have obtained, one of those was correct (although Grove lists one of the operas in question as a "masque" and another as an "extravaganza").
So M is for George but not Walter Macfarren nor Mrs Macfarren, both of whom dabbled with staves.
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Originally posted by edashtav View PostWell, well the suspect with a corpus of work that probably exceeded Darius Milhaud in volume and whose manuscripts are the least well documented is Sir George Macfarren. I suspect that he wrote more that the required number of operas but may have reached 13 string quartets only if one accepts four transcribed from manuscripts of early composers. Even with his concertini, there is room for discussion, since he wrote works for the classical concertina, and, well ...
So M is for George but not Walter Macfarren nor Mrs Macfarren, both of whom dabbled with staves.
An additional clue would be that an offspring has composed eight operas (so far).
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Originally posted by edashtav View PostGoodness, it. Must be Maconchy and CO. Well, I never gave Elizabeth a chance!
Your turn for the next puzzle.
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As the accidental winner who won by trawling, I feel unworthy to assume the mantle.
But... Here's a facile N for you:
An N word that appears within the titles of:
A work for Grand-Pa by a completer of Mozart;
An overture by one of the big "B"s;
A choral work with soprano and orchestra by a Master of the King's / Queen's Music(k).
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