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  • ferneyhoughgeliebte
    Gone fishin'
    • Sep 2011
    • 30163

    12th September

    The Feast Day of Saint Elvis - or, to give him his Celtic spelling, Ailbe - a late 5th -early 6th Century bishop, regarded as the founder of Emly in County Tipperary. A colourful early life, according to the legends - nursed by a wolf as a baby after his mother's servants left him abandoned on a rock (they were being kind - they'd been ordered to kill him), he was discovered by visiting Britons who brought him up. When the time came for them to return to "Wales", they had thought to leave Ailbe in Ireland, but many misfortunes prevented their departure until they decided to take him with them. Years later, when he was a bishop, an elderly wolf being pursued by hunters placed her head on his chest [the legends don't explain how she managed this] and the Bishop, recognising his "foster-mother" took her into his protection and fed her cubs in his abbey. Also recognising his [other] foster-parents, he is said to have baptized St David.

    It's also Conception Day in Russia - commemorating the date when Lenin was conceived, and inaugurated to encourage Russian couples to increase the birth rate: those who give birth on 12th June are rewarded by the government, with cash payments for anyone having more than one child. An off-shoot, obviously, from the Soviet Era? Well, no - it was introduced by Putin in 2006.

    Totally inconnected - it's also National Day of Encouragement in some of the United States. Don't get your hopes up.

    Also on This Date: Athenian forces and their allies defeat the Persian forces of Darius I at the Battle of Marathon (490BCE - possibly); Henry Hudson begins his exploration of the river now named after him (1609); the forces of the Holy Roman Empire defeat those of the Ottoman Empire at the Battle of Vienna, ending the siege of the city and marking the decisive turning point in the Ottoman-Hapsburg Wars (1683); Casanova is imprisoned without trial in solitary confinement [apart from "millions of fleas"] (1755 - he is sentenced to 5 years' imprisonment, but escapes the following year); Switzerland becomes a Federal state after the adoption of a federal constitution (1848); US steamship SS Central America runs into a hurricane and is sunk, with the deaths of 425 passengers, and the loss of its cargo of 15 toms of gold (1857); Cleopatra's Needle is erected on the Victoria Embankment in London (1878 - concealed in one of the pedestals is a Time Capsule containing a box of hairpins, a box of cigars, several tobacco pipes, a set of imperial weights, a baby's bottle, some children's toys, a shilling razor, a hydraulic jack and some samples of the cable used in the erection, a 3 ft bronze model of the monument, a complete set of contemporary British coins, a rupee, a portrait of Queen Victoria, a written history of the transport of the monument, plans on vellum, a translation of the inscriptions, copies of the Bible in several languages, a copy of John 3:16 in 215 languages,[7] a copy of Whitaker's Almanack, a Bradshaw Railway Guide, a map of London and copies of 10 daily newspapers, and a set of 12 photographs of the best-looking English women of the day); Arbroath FC defeats Bon Accord Aberdeen FC 36 - nil; the largest marginal defeat of any match in which both sides are playing to win (1885); Fort Salisbury is founded by Cecil Rhodes (1890 - subsequently Harawe, the capital city of Zimbabwe. Exactly 33 years later to the day, Britain annexes the territory); Mahler conducts the premiere of his 8th Symphony [with forces of just under 1030 performers] in the recently-opened Neue Musik-Festhalle in Munich (1910 - the Hall, with a seating capacity of 3,200 is sold out, and the performance takes 85 minutes: it is the last premiere of one of his own works that the composer conducts - the second performance is the following evening); an intelligence officer in the German Army is instructed to report on a meeting of the German Workers' Party - the officer is Adolf Hitler, and he makes such an impressive speech at the meeting that he is invited to join the party (1919); nuclear physicist Leo Szilard reads a newspaper article by Ernest Rutherford which dismisses the possibility of using nuclear fission as a source of energy ["very poor and inefficient ... moonshine"] - Szilard is so disturbed by Rutherford's rejection that he goes for a walk, and, whilst he waits fro a pedestrian crossing light to change, he conceives the idea of the Nuclear Chain Reaction (1933); Jean Vigo's film L'Atalante goes on general release (1934); Michel Ravidat's dog, Robot, falls down a hole as they take a walk in the village of Montignac - returning with friends to rescue the animal, he discovers the caves of Lascaux Cave and their Paleolithic wall paintings (1940); SS Commandos rescue Mussolini from house arrest (1943); the Soviets launch Luna 2 from Baikonur Cosmodrome (1959); President Kennedy delivers his "We choose to go to the Moon" speech at a football stadium in Houston, Texas (1962); the first episode of The Monkees is broadcast on NBC in the United Staes (1966); at Dawson's Field, a remote desert airstrip in Jordan, Palestinian terrorists blow up three empty passenger aircraft that they had hijacked 5 days earlier (1970); Haile Selassie is deposed as Emperor of Ethiopia in a military coup (1974); anti-apartheid activist Steve Biko dies ina South African hospital after having been beaten to death by police officers whilst in custody (1977); a drunken American truck driver steals a civilian plane and crashes it into the grounds of the White House (1994 - he is the only casualty); the University of Leicester announces that skeletal remains uncovered the week earlier in a public Car Park in Leicester were "a possible candidate" for being those of Richard III (2012); ... and, this time last year, scientists working in Blombos Cave in South Africa discover the oldest known "drawing", dating from 73,000 years ago (it's a series of six nearly parallel lines crossed by three curved ones, so it might be what we'd describe as "writing" as much as "drawing").

    Birthdays Today include: William Dugdale (1605); Anselm Feuerbach (1829); Herbert Asquith (1852); Maurice Chevalier (1888); Alfred A Knopf (1892); Ernst Pepping (1901); Louis MacNeice (1907); Jesse Owens (1913); Desmond Llewelyn (1914); Jackson Mac Low (1922); Larry Austin (1930); Ian Holm (1931); Tatiana Troyanos (1938); Barry White (1944); John Mauceri (1945); Hans Zimmer (1957); Tarana Burke (1973) ( ... and, on the same day in 1950, Gustav Brummer and Bruce Mahler who between them have a composer and [almost] The Incredible Hulk).

    Final Days for: Blanche of Lancaster (1368 - Bbm's Xtimes great-grandmother); Jan van der Heyden (1710); Jean-Philippe Rameau (1764); Franz Xaver Richter (1789); Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher (1819); Leonid Andreyev (1919); Robert Lowell (1977); Anthony Perkins (1992); Raymond Burr (1994); Jeremy Brett (1995); Stanley Turrentine (2000); Johnny Cash (2003); John Buller (2004).


    ... and the R3 Schedules for the Morning of Monday, 12th September, 1989 were:

    Morning Concert: Boccherini Sinfonia in C, Op21 #3; Delius Brigg Fair; Schubert Rosamunde Ovt; Franck Symphonic Variations; Berwald Symph #4 in Eb.
    Composers of the Week: Les Six (Durey 3 Poemes de Petrone; Tailleferre Premieres prouesses, Pastorale; Honegger Toccata & Variations; Milhaud Printemps, Pastorale; Auric 3 Interludes; Poulenc Rapsodie Negre)
    Iberian Connections: Falla Allegro de concierto, Serenata; Lacerda Songs; Castelnuovo-Tedesco Guitar Concerto; Granados Goyescas, Escenas romanticas; Rodrigo Sonada de adios, Danza de la amapola; Villa Lobos Chromo Ovalle Azulao.
    BBCSSO conducted by Louis Fremaux: Offenbach Orpheus in the Underworld Ovt; Saint-Saens Danse Macabre; Roussel Le Festin de l'araignée.
    [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

    Comment

    • cloughie
      Full Member
      • Dec 2011
      • 22118

      I guess that makes a Celtic Elvis impersonator a Ailbe Wannabe!
      I also like the idea of a descendant of Gustav and Alma being named Bruce.

      Comment

      • ferneyhoughgeliebte
        Gone fishin'
        • Sep 2011
        • 30163

        Originally posted by cloughie View Post
        I guess that makes a Celtic Elvis impersonator a Ailbe Wannabe!
        [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

        Comment

        • cloughie
          Full Member
          • Dec 2011
          • 22118

          Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post
          Ticks a few of the boxes!

          Comment

          • ferneyhoughgeliebte
            Gone fishin'
            • Sep 2011
            • 30163

            13th September

            The Feast Day of Saint Wulfthryth, a 10th Century Anglo-Saxon abbess who had been abducted from Wilton Abbey as a novitiate by King Edgar the Peaceable (sic) and treated as his concubine, giving birth to their daughter, Saint Edith - after a year, mother & dughter returned to the Abbey. Edgar repented his actions, performing many acts of penance (none more harsh than not wearing his crown for 7 years) and granting Wulfthryth lands in Wiltshire and the Isle of Wight, which became the property of Wilton when she bacame Abbess. She was renowned in her lifetime for her acts of charity, interceding in legal matters with her royal kidnapper (whose "Peaceable" epithet seems to have come with a heavy dollop of irony), and getting him to show mercy.

            And those of St Venerius the Hermit, Patron Saint of Lighthouse Keepers, and [in some denominations] of St John of Chrysostom, the 4th Century Archbishop of Constantinople who denounced abuse of authority, and whose Litany has been used for choral settings by many Russian composers, including Tchaikovsky, Rachmaninoff, and Rimsky-Korsakoff.

            Also on This Date: Michelangelo begins work on his statue of David (1501); after a 3-month siege of the city, British forces, led by General James Wolfe, take control of Quebec from the French with the Battle of the Plains of Abraham (1759 - the battle lasts for about an hour, and Wolfe is killed during its course); American Lawyer Francis Scott Keys, who had been negotiating the release of American prisoners, is detained by British troops as they mount an unsuccessful assault on the city of Baltimore (1814 - watching helplessly as the British bombard Fort McHenry, he is moved to write a poem The Defence of Fort McHenry, the words to which, beginning "O! say can you see, by the dawn's early light", become the US National Anthem, when provided with a Musical setting of an English Drinking Club song); following an accidental explosion whilst working on clearing ground for the construction of the Rutland & Burlington railroad in Vermont, Phineas Gage has a 6kg tamping iron shot cleanly through his skull (1848 - despite severe damage to his brain, he is able to speak, and remains conscious as he is taken to the nearest doctor, who arrives to be greeted by Gage "Well, Doctor - here is business enough for you, and who doesn't believe his new patient's description of what has happened to him until ... well, read the WIKI entry for the gorey details; Gage lives another 12 years, but with a complete personality change); 12 years after he had filed for a patent, Hannibal Goodwin is granted one for his invention of nitrocellulose roll film (1898 - in the meantime, George Eastman had developed <ho-ho> his own process of roll film); riots begin in New York as gangs of youths begin attacks on men who wear Straw Hats after the socially-accepted conventional date to put them away for the Summer (1922 - it sounds as silly as attacks on people who wear socks with their sandals, but the attacks, with clubs [some with nails driven into them] are visious, and one man is killed); following calls for Government investigations into corruption in the Spanish Army, a miltary coup replaces the democratic parliament with a miltary dictatorship under Captain General Miguel Primo de Rivera (1923); the most damage of the 16 bombings of Buckingham Palace during the Blitz ruptures a water main and blew out most of the windows on the southern and western sides of the Quadrangle and devastate the interior of the Royal Chapel - 4 workers were injured; one of them later dying (1940 - the Queen is moved to comment "I am glad we have been bombed. It makes me feel I can look the East End in the face"); Indian troops invade the Princely State of Hyderabad and annex it for the Indian Union (1948); Stravinsky conducts the premiere of his Canticum Sacrum in St Mark's Cathedral, Venice (1956 - on the same day, the US Navy runs tests on the IBM 305 RAMAC [Random Access Method of Accounting and Control] Computer - the first to use hard disk drive); the day after its launch, Soviet spacecraft Luna-2 becomes the first artificial oblect to make contact with another celestial body when it crash-lands on the surface of the Moon (1959); the University of Mississippi is given a District Court Order instructing it to admin black applicant James Meredith as "segregation is unconstitutional, as all taxpayers fund the University" (1962 - the University, supported by the state Governor, then introduce a clause forbidding entry to any student with a criminal record - and Meredith is accused and convicted in absentia of false voter registration - the Federal Government is forced to intervene to compel the University to register Meredith, and the Governor and his lieutenant are found to be in contempt of court, and ordered to pay fines of $1,000 and $5,000 for every day that Meredith is forbidden to register); the Plastic Ono Band [John Lennon, Yoko Ono, Eric Clapton, Klaus Voorman, and Alan White] give their first public performance at the first Toronto Rock Revival Festival (1969 - on the same day, the first episode of Scooby-Doo Where Are You? is broadcast for the first time); the first episode of spoof TV Series Soap is broadcast - to the protests of religious groups [who hadn't seen the programme] responding to criticisms made in Newsweek by a reviewer who similarly hadn't seen the programme (1977); Nintendo releases the first Home Entertainment Super Mario game (1985); a forgotten capsule of material used for radiotherapy treatment is stolen from an abandoned an abandoned hospital in Brazil, resulting in 4 deaths and 249 cases of radiation poisoning (1987); Yitzhak Rabin shakes hands with Yasser Arafat after signing the Oslo Peace Accords at the White House, granting limited Palestinian autonomy and Right to Return (1993); Elton John releases his reworking of Candle in the Wind in tribute to the late princess Diana (1997); civilian flights are restored, two days after the 9/11 attacks (2001); the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples is adopted (2007); ... and, this time last year, explosions caused by excessive pressure in Natural Gas pipes destroy 40 homes in the Merrimack Valley area of Massachusetts, and compel 30,000 people to evacuate their houses. (The explosions occur as workers are replacing old gas pipes - somebody forgets to lower the gas supply as they are doing so.)

            Birthdays Today include: Cesare Borgia (1475); John Leland (definitely 13th Sept, possibly 1503); Girolamo Frescobaldi (possibly 13th Sept, definitely 1583); Francesco Manelli (1594); Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach (1830); Schönberg (1874); Larry Shields (1893); JB Priestley (1894); Roger Désormière (1898); Claudette Colbert (1903); Roald Dahl (1916); Ray Charles (1918); Maurice Jarre (1924); Mel Tormé (1925); Arleen Auger (1939); Stella McCartney (1971); ... and it is the 200th anniversary of the birth of Clara Wieck Schumann.

            Final Days for: Emperor Titus (81); Andrea Mantegna (1506); Michel de Montaigne (1592); Ludwig Feuerbach (1872); Emmanuel Chabrier (1894); Lili Elbe (1931); Julius Röntgen (1932); Heath Robinson (1944); Leo Weiner (1960); Leopold Stokowski (1977); Robert Irving (1991).


            ... and the Radio 3 Schedules for the morning of Saturday, 13th September, 1969 were:

            Record Review: Summer Retrospective (with John Lade, Charles Cudworth, Noel Goodwin, & Robert Henderson)
            The Saturday Concert: Liszt Reminiscences de Don Juan & Reminiscences de Boccanegra (Ogdon); Mendelssohn MSND Incidental Music (Kubelik: 40+ mins-worth); Mendelssohn/Liszt Wedding March & Dance of the Elves (Kentner)
            Jazz Record Requests presented by Steve Race
            Edinburgh International Festival: Piano Recital by Misha Dichter (Beethoven Andante Favori; Schubert Sonata in A (D959); Rachmaninov 4 Preludes; Prokofiev Sonata #7 [with Music for harpsichord played by Luciano Sgrizzi during the interval)

            Then 5 hours of sport.
            [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

            Comment

            • ferneyhoughgeliebte
              Gone fishin'
              • Sep 2011
              • 30163

              16th Seotember

              The Feast Day of St Ninian, the late 4th-early 5th Century missionary and apostle of the Southern Picts, first mentioned in Bede. The White House he built in Whithorn in 397 is the first recorded church built in Scotland - and a reconstruction can still be seen there. The cave on the coast in which he used when he needed seclusion can also be visited - I hope without the empty crisps & sweets wrappers and plastic bottles that were strewn around when I was last there in 2003.

              And International Day for the Preservation of the Ozone Layer.

              Also on This Date: Owain Glyndŵr assumes his ancestoral title of Prince of Powys (1400); deposed King James VII/II dies and is succeeded by his son, James, "the Old Pretender" (1701); the Great Seal of the United Sates is first used - to seal the document declaring it the official seal of the US (1789); the General Motors Company is founded (1908); terrorists explode a bomb in a horse wagon in Wall Street, killing 38 people and seriously injuring 143 others (1920); Soviet Submarine B-67 becomes the first to launch a Scud ballistic misile (1955); the first photocopier, the Xerox 914, is demonstrated in public in New York (1959 - the event is televised); the first attempt to weaken tropical cyclones is undertaken in Project Stormfury - silver iodide is flown into the cyclone in the hope that it would freeze and disrupt the structure (1961 - it doesn't work, neither does it in the next six attempts over the following decade); Samuel Barber's opera Antony & Cleopatra is premiered at the grand opening of the new Metropolitan Opera House in the Lincoln Centre for the Performing Arts in New York (1966 - the conductor is Thomas Schippers, and the cast includes Leontyne Price and Jess Thomas); Presidential hopeful Richard Nixon appears [for 5 seconds] on Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In, giving the show's catch phrase "Sock it to me" (1968 - he receives the standard $210 fee for his efforts - he'd refused to utter the words "you bet your sweet bippy" on the grounds that he didn't know - and didn't want to be told - what a "bippy" was - the money going into his campaign fund); the Black September Palestinian militant organisation is formed following King Hussain of Jordan's declaration of military rule (1970); Bob Dylan begins the recording sessions for his album Bllod on the Tracks (1974); filming begins in Tunisia on Monty Python's Life of Brian, using props and extras left over from Franco Zeffirelli's Jesus of Nazareth (1978); eight people escape from East germany, crossing the border into West Germany in a balloon that they have made themselves (1979); Britain is forced to withdraw from the European Exchange Rate Mechanism following hostile trading activity by George Soros and other speculators (1992 - the day costs the British economy £3.3billion: Soros makes over £1billion profit from his activities); the first episode of Frasier is broadcast in the United States on NBC (1993); the British Government lifts its 6-year ban on the broadcast voices of members of 11 Irish nationalist organisations (1994); security guards employed by the US government open fire on Iraqi civilians in Baghdad, killing 17 people and injuring 20 others (2007).

              Birthdays Today include: Heinrich Bach (1615); Nathan Rothschild (1777); Paul Taffanel (1844); Alfred Noyes (1880); Clive Bell (1881); TE Hulme (1883); Jean Arp (1886); Nadia Boulanger (1887); Alexander Korda (1893); Hans Swarowsky (1899); Josef Schächter (1901); Paul Henning (1911); Cy Walter (1915); Guy Hamilton (1922); Lauren Bacall (1924); BB King (1925); Peter Falk (1927); George Chakiris (1934); Carl Andre (1935); Piero Gamba (1936); Thomas Larcher (1963); ... and Katie Melua is 35 and George Chakiris 85 today.

              Final Days for: Anne Bradstreet (1672); Leo Fall (1925); John McCormack (1945); James Jeans (1946); Fred Quimby (1965); Marc Bolan & Maria Callas (both 1977); Jean Piaget (1980); František Jílek (1993); Edward Albee (2016).

              ... and the Radio 3 Schedules for the Morning of Tuesday, 16th September, 1969 were:

              Overture: Vivaldi Concerto in a for 2 Violins; JC Bach Symph #1 in Eb; Telemann Overture in D.
              Morning Concert: Boieldieu Caliph of Baghdad Ovt; Beethoven Triple Conc; Strauss Emperor Waltz.
              This Week's Composer: Schumann (Carnaval op9; Kinderszenen Op15).
              Concerto: Mozart Linz Symph; Brahms Pno Conc #2; Edith Vogel/BBCNSO/Reginald Stead.
              Music Making: Schubert Pno Son in a D784; Strauss Lieder; Varese Density 21.5; Ravel Ondine; Fauré L'horizon chimérique Op 118; Poulenc Flute Sonata.
              Cardiff Midday Prom: Mozart Symph #33; G Bush Songs of Wonder.
              [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

              Comment

              • ferneyhoughgeliebte
                Gone fishin'
                • Sep 2011
                • 30163

                [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

                Comment

                • ferneyhoughgeliebte
                  Gone fishin'
                  • Sep 2011
                  • 30163

                  [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

                  Comment

                  • ferneyhoughgeliebte
                    Gone fishin'
                    • Sep 2011
                    • 30163

                    19th September

                    Ahoy, me Hearties! Greetings on this, International Talk Like a Pirate Day.

                    Also on This Date: it be the ... <ahem> ... it is the final day of the month-long Siege of Damascus as the city falls to Islamic forces (634 - the first major city of the Eastern Roman Empire to fall in the Muslim Conquest of Syria); the Black Prince leads his forces to a decisive victory over the French led by John II at the Battle of Poitiers (1356); the very first Federal Budget of the United States is set by the Continental Congress (1778); the Glorious Revolution overthrowing the reign of Queen Isabella II and instituting a republic begins in Spain (1868); the four month Siege of Paris begins in the Franco-Prussian War (1870); President Garfield dies from the gunshot wounds he recieved two months earlier (1881 - he is succeeded by Chester A Arthur); Mahler conducts the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra in the premiere of his 7th Symphony in Prague as part of the Diamond Jubilee Festival of Emperor Franz Josef (1908); Polish Army Captain Witold Pilecki voluntarily joins a group of ghetto prisoners being rounded up in Warsaw, so that he can get into Auschwitz and organize resistance activities there, and send reports of Nazi atrocities back to the Allies (1940 - Pilecki survives the Nazis, and is shot to the back of his head by the Soviet military authorities in 1948); the US Army begins its longest battle in its history against the Wehrmacht in the Battle of Hürtgen Forest (1944 - the Battle rages until 16th December, after 250,000 soldiers have been killed on both sides); on the 6th Anniversary of his first Germany Calling broadcast, William Joyce is sentenced to hang for treason (1945); Winston Churchill gives a speech at the University of Zurich calling for a "United States of Europe" (1946); whilst on a visit to England, Charlie Chaplin hears that the United States government has banned him from re-entering the US (1948); the first underground nuclear explosion is detonated in Nabraska (1957); Anna Mary Robertson ["Grandma Moses"] is featured on the cover of LIFE magazine to commemorate her 100th birthday earlier in the month (1960 - she lives and continues to paint for another 15 months); the Pilton Pop, Blues & Folk Festival is held, attended by 1,500 people who had come to see The Kinks, but who had to put up with Tyrnnosaurus Rex when they withdraw at the last minute (1970 - in subsequent years the Festival is renamed "Glastonbury"); "A Touch of Class", the first ever episode of Fawlty Towers, is first broadcast on BBC2 (1975); Gloria Coates' Symphony on Open Strings is premiered at the Warsaw Festival by the Polish Chamber Orchestra conducted by Jerzy Maksymiuk (1978); Simon & Garfunkel give their reunion concert in Central Park (1981); the first documented Computer Emoticons [ & ] are used on Carnagie Mellon University Bulletin Board (1982); a US Senate hearing is held to address "Porn Rock", with "the subject of the content of certain sound recordings and suggestions that recording packages be labeled to provide a warning to prospective purchasers of sexually explicit or other potentially offensive content" (1985 - with opposing testimony from Frank Zappa ["the proposal is an ill-conceived piece of nonsense which fails to deliver any real benefits to children, infringes the civil liberties of people who are not children, and promises to keep the courts busy for years dealing with the interpretation and enforcement problems inherent in the proposal's design."] and John Denver, whose Rocky Mountain High had been misinterpreted by the supporters of the censorship) - on the same day , a violent earthquake in Mexico City causes the deaths of at least 5,000 people, including Placido Domingo's Aunt, Uncle, Cousin, and his 2-year-old nephew (exactly 32 years to the day later, a smaller earthquake in the Mexican city of Puebla causes the deaths of 370 people); German tourists Helmut & Erika Simons discover the frozen mummified remains of a man whom they believe to be a recently diceased mountaineer as they holiday in the Italian Alps - it turns out to be over 5,000 years old, and is named by archaeolgists Ötzi the Iceman (1991); the Thai Royal Army stages a coup against the elected government (2006); the BP Oil Spill at the Macondo Oil Prospect in the Gulf of Mexico is finally sealed - after 5 months spillage of 175,000,000 gallons of oil (2010); an al-Qaeda-influenced terrorist is arrested in New Jersey after a shoot-out with police, following a 3-day bombing campaign (2016).

                    Birthdays Today include: Arthur Rackham (1867); Ben Turpin (1869); Christopher Stone (1882); Judith Auer (1905); Ferdinand Porsche (1909); William Golding & Allan Petersson (both 1911); Kurt Sanderling (1912); Ernest Tomlinson (1924); Arthur Wills (1926); Adam West (1928); David McCallum (1933); Zygmunt Krauze (1938); Cass Elliot (1941); Kate Adie (1945); Jeremy Irons (1948); Nile Rodgers (1952); ... and Pete Murray is 94; Austen Mitchell is [and Brian Epstein would have been] 85; and Twiggy is 70 today.

                    Final Days for: Thomas Barnardo (1905); Liza Lehmann (1918); Guy Gibson (1944 - aged 26); Nikos Skalkottas (1949); Robert Casadesus (1972); Italo Calvino (1985); Hermes Pan (1990); Patricia Hayes (1998); Robert Barnard (2013); Jackie Collins (2015) ... and, this time last year, Denis Norden.


                    ... and the Radio 3 Schedules for the Morning of Wednesday, 19th September, 1979 were:

                    Your Midweek Choice: Boyce Symph #6; Myslivecek Wind Octet #1; CPE Bach Organ Concerto in G; Diamond Symph #4; Tchaikovsky Vln Conc.
                    This Week's Composer: Cavalli (Sonata a Tre; Messa Concertata)
                    Lancaster University's New Organ played by Ian Hare (Purcell Voluntary; Tippett Prelude at vespro di Monteverdi; Bach Trio-Sonata #4; Leighton Paean.
                    Song Recital by Max von Egmond & Paul Hamburger: Weber 3 songs; Cornelius Trauer und Trost; Schubert Drei Gesange.
                    The Brandenburg Concertos: 1st of 2 programmes (Mozart Il Re Pastore Ovt; Concertone in C; Bach Brandenburgs 4, 3, & 5. Bournemouth Sinfonietta/Kenneth Montgomery - with an Interval talk on "Bach the Harmonist").

                    Ha-Haaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaarrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr r!!!!!!!!!!
                    Last edited by ferneyhoughgeliebte; 19-09-19, 20:23.
                    [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

                    Comment

                    • vinteuil
                      Full Member
                      • Nov 2010
                      • 12800

                      Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post
                      Ahoy, me Hearties! Greetings on this, International Talk Like a Pirate Day.


                      Ha-Haaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaarrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr r!!!!!!!!!!
                      .

                      The famous pirate sketch from R4's Million Pound Radio Show



                      .

                      Comment

                      • Richard Tarleton

                        Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post
                        ... and Pete Murray is 94


                        I used to listen to his Saturday Night programme after finishing my shift when I was working as a chef twixt school and university, in 1967 - its cheery theme tune was a song by the New Christy Minstrels

                        Comment

                        • ferneyhoughgeliebte
                          Gone fishin'
                          • Sep 2011
                          • 30163

                          Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View Post


                          I used to listen to his Saturday Night programme after finishing my shift when I was working as a chef twixt school and university, in 1967 - its cheery theme tune was a song by the New Christy Minstrels
                          Ah - I was more accustomed to the later Radio 2 daily -

                          Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.
                          [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

                          Comment

                          • cloughie
                            Full Member
                            • Dec 2011
                            • 22118

                            Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post
                            Ah - I was more accustomed to the later Radio 2 daily -

                            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EVuFYm0TvLI
                            PM through his late night programmes in the mid to late sixties introduced me may artistes at the ‘classier’ and jazz-oriented end of pop - what Benny Green referred to as proper songs!

                            Comment

                            • Wychwood
                              Full Member
                              • Aug 2017
                              • 247

                              A late addition: Dr Arthur Wills is 93 today, more than thirty of those years as DoM at Ely Cathedral.

                              Comment

                              • ferneyhoughgeliebte
                                Gone fishin'
                                • Sep 2011
                                • 30163

                                Originally posted by Wychwood View Post
                                A late addition: Dr Arthur Wills is 93 today, more than thirty of those years as DoM at Ely Cathedral.
                                [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

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