I'm not sure what 'reconnections' are, but never mind! I did admittedly start at something of a disadvantage, I suppose, in that 7 of the 16 names were completely unknown to me....
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostI'm not sure what 'reconnections' are, but never mind! I did admittedly start at something of a disadvantage, I suppose, in that 7 of the 16 names were completely unknown to me....
Speaking of separating the Tarzans from the Janes, and the knowns from the unknowns, I knew that I would be forced into uttering the following sentence sometime in my life.
Here's something from Phil Collins:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zc3MnoSS5Hw
Good luck!Last edited by Lat-Literal; 25-10-18, 13:01.
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Tabakova, Radigue and (Roxanna) Panufnik are female composers who have featured on Hear and Now in the last 3 or 4 years. Eleanor Alberga featured on Woman’s Hour on R4. So if it’s BBC radio-specific it works, but not if it’s H&N specific. So I'm getting warm but probably wrong.
A bonus point to Lat-Literal for the red herring of Panufnik!
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Originally posted by Boilk View PostTabakova, Radigue and (Roxanna) Panufnik are female composers who have featured on Hear and Now in the last 3 or 4 years. Eleanor Alberga featured on Woman’s Hour on R4. So if it’s BBC radio-specific it works, but not if it’s H&N specific. So I'm getting warm but probably wrong.
Given that there was a Panufnik senior, yes, that name was there as a point to confuse.
Do you know who the fifth female is?
Then, what might distinguish the four you have listed from her?
You have actually given yourself a big clue in a part of your post.Last edited by Lat-Literal; 25-10-18, 14:18.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostElementary my dear ... ? (Although a couple of months late, perhaps?)
Have I bungled it?
I usually do.
(If it turns out to mean what I think it does, pretend I set the board in early summer which, of course, I might have done)
…..ferney, would you like to enlighten us on your thinking? - I'm on tenterhooks now.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostWell - a couple of months ago was ...
(But I was being flippant, and not at all ... )
If it is wrong, blame b----y Google.
But it might not be wrong.
I need to know as in need to know.
This sort of situation if left unaddressed - and I can't help it - tends to bring a new Brexit thread on.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostWell, all I meant was that "the fifth female" you referred to in #71 was/might be Augusta Holmes.
It wasn't sheer luck, Sherlock.
So we are now back to the question I asked of Boilk but with a name.
What distinguishes the four composers Boilk listed from Augusta Holmes?
I'm still worried about your reference to two months late which I don't understand.
But if it refers to what I sense it might refer to then I would have to tweak the answer slightly - but only slightly.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostWe're in Octoba, Lats - two months ago was Augusta!
Rosza, Koechlin, Grainger, and Brun all wrote Music associated with The Jungle Book.
Excellent.
My board is as robust as I had hoped.
Yes - The Jungle Book. Grainger and Koechlin were both fascinated by it and each wrote music for it. I do have both in my collection. My feeling is that anyone who knows the composers only reasonably well would/should know. Rosza and Bruns - not Brun - wrote the music for the film adaptations; one in the early 1940s and the other in the 1960s.
So these are "Jungle Book composers".
The clips from Elton John (The Lion King), Phil Collins (Tarzan) and Hank Mizell (Jungle Rock - Top of the Pops) all alluded to this section.
We now have two completed lines : the other being "Composers with names including three alphabetically consecutive letters."Last edited by Lat-Literal; 25-10-18, 15:12.
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