Originally posted by mahlerei
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Stormy Weather II
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostHi Mahlerei, you are indeed right!
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Sky Heroes Day, Kenley Airfield.
Finally, finally....they have got it completely right. Not sure if it is the lottery money, the planning which I was told took many months and it showed or my persistent "vision thing" from the sidelines for the protection and enhancement of our local airfield forwarded to key people but the tone and detail were spot on - the archaeological dimension, the information on the role of women pilots in WW2, the West Indian food tent next to the Portcullis Club, the train around the perimeter and the great covers band. All done in a mild way where the old airmen didn't feel threatened but respected. Ages 1 to 100. Many nationalities. Wonderful - and weather wise so atmospherically bracing we could have been a just a mile from the sea.
Congratulations - and thanks - to all involved.
The page you’re looking for has not been found. That’s probably because the site has recently been re-designed, so the page ...
Best song of the day: Not It Must Be Love (though great sax - I watched it intently), No Woman No Cry ("the Caribbean people are now selling all food for £2" - cue a mad rush to their tent), Fly Me To The Moon (passable if routine), California Girls (some achievement for two wags who happen to be good musicians) or YMCA (and did that joke spectacularly backfire given the bloke he brought back to the dancing - consequently in good spirits all round it was made into something more memorable) but this one which confirmed the strand of 1972:
O'Jays - Love Train - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QyT9jTW7MHcLast edited by Lat-Literal; 10-09-17, 18:13.
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Originally posted by mahlerei View PostThanks Maestro! Then again, the site's 'coverage' of Harvey and Irma has been atrocious, with lots of contradictions and general howlers; anyone heard of the British Virginia Islands? And there's someone there who loves the word 'deadly', which seems to appear in every second headline (and not just weather-related ones, eother).Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostHi Mahlerei, you are indeed right!
True, the eye of a hurricane is a small area of more-or-less calm, for all sorts of complicated reasons to elaborate to expand on here; but the area into which the spiralling winds flow immediately surrounding the eye, known as the eyewall region, is always the area in which are concentrated the strongest and most destructive winds of the system, as well as the heaviest of its rainfall.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostEr, well, to be pedantic, not quite!
True, the eye of a hurricane is a small area of more-or-less calm, for all sorts of complicated reasons to elaborate to expand on here; but the area into which the spiralling winds flow immediately surrounding the eye, known as the eyewall region, is always the area in which are concentrated the strongest and most destructive winds of the system, as well as the heaviest of its rainfall.Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostAre we going to have a good day today?
Well, you did ask!
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Huge monsoon style downpour currently over London, barely 10 minutes after a cloudless balmy autumn blue sky...
And.... in the time it took to open the thread and type that, the sun's out again!"...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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