Alphabet Associations - II
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This is a sticky topic.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostDon Kay, the Australian composer, wrote a String Quartet in 2000 with the title Memento Mori - which was also the title of Muriel Spark's 1959 novel. What this has to do with the City of Sunderland, I cannot fathom.
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Originally posted by antongould View PostOne presumes Legend was a piece about Len Shackleton .... ???
As it's now merely a matter of time, I must recognise that Fernie is no Learner but the Learned One ( I though Bear vs Boor might cause at least a day's delay) and he should conjure a suitable Legend for the Letter L. And now to pack and catch trains and buses...
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Originally posted by edashtav View PostI've given a clue to the true link in a previous response to Fernie. Q.V.
Three composers with the Kafkaesque surname Kay:
A) Norman Kay: wrote incidental Music to the Pilot and two further Doctor Who stories (The Tribe of Gum and The Sensorites) and a Cantata called King Herod. (As well as writing the Oxford Studies of Composers book on Shostakovich.)
B) Ulysses Kay: like Walton (and financed similarly by the Koussevitsky Foundation - part of a whole Koussevitsky range of make-up products) wrote a one-act opera based on Chekhov's "joke in one act", Медведь (which can be translated either as "The Bear" or "The Boor") - and which was included in Michael Frayn's evening of Chekhovian entertainment, The Sneeze. (The connection with "the other K" lies in that association, but that's for a much later day.)
C) Don Kay: wrote a String Quartet with the same title as Muriel Spark's 1959 novel Memento Mori, and who builds ocean liners in the spare bedroom of his Tasmanian home. Or something. (I could've got a connection with Del boy!)
"Learned One"? I knew next to nothing of any of the composers before this puzzle - but as soon as you bring in Doctor Who ... The Pointless jackpot awaits me! (And I've also got the Shostakovich book.)Last edited by ferneyhoughgeliebte; 28-07-16, 09:59.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostThank you - but full marks to ed for a super puzzle.
Well, well : I've arrived home and one clue remains.
Nil Desperandum, Auspice Deo : Don't Despair ('cos) God is on our Side is the motto of the City of Sunderland. (Always useful when your side is close to the bottom of the Premiership. For those not versed in football, Sam Allardyce, aka GOD saved Sunderland. Now, he's been given the job of Saving England after Brexit, or was it Euroexit?)
Auspice Deo is an early (1962) orchestral work by the Tasmanian composer Don Kay.
Everything else has been made clear by Ferney.
As for "Bear With" : that was my unconscious at work!
But... my use of Nil Desperandum in response to Ferney was supposed to be helpful.
{Truth to tell, I was so busy, yesterday, that I made up a question for "L" instead of Kay! So... next time, you're all poised on "K", please help me to win, I'm longing to get my "L" out in the open before I forget it!}
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,Originally posted by edashtav View PostYou were the star, Ferney, full marks for expeditious endeavour!
Well, well : I've arrived home and one clue remains.
Nil Desperandum, Auspice Deo : Don't Despair ('cos) God is on our Side is the motto of the City of Sunderland. (Always useful when your side is close to the bottom of the Premiership. For those not versed in football, Sam Allardyce, aka GOD saved Sunderland. Now, he's been given the job of Saving England after Brexit, or was it Euroexit?)
Auspice Deo is an early (1962) orchestral work by the Tasmanian composer Don Kay.
Everything else has been made clear by Ferney.
As for "Bear With" : that was my unconscious at work!
But... my use of Nil Desperandum in response to Ferney was supposed to be helpful.
{Truth to tell, I was so busy, yesterday, that I made up a question for "L" instead of Kay! So... next time, you're all poised on "K", please help me to win, I'm longing to get my "L" out in the open before I forget it!}
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Very well, then - another double letter one:
One moved from Trinidad to the Arctic;
Another put on Airs and Graces (but Don't Mention the War);
The third (followed by much Internet activity) produced Songs of Spring (to say nothing of the Offspring Songs).
What the L?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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