As Cleethorpes has been getting a bit of an (entirely justified, imo) kicking on this thread, it might be instructive for us to remember the fish-gutter turned soul maestro who constitutes its sole (ha! Double pun!) positive contribution to the world:
Does this constitute snobbery?
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostAs it's clearly confession time (gulp)… here goes....
I like Gilbert AND Sullivan.
So there!
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostRaymond Edward O’Sullivan was, in my view, a very talented popular song writer. His lyrics were clever, his songs told a story and he sang in tune, and didn’t push his voice into areas they did not belong. As far as Gilbert and Sullivan are concerned Sullivan was a very good composer as his repertoire shows. Gilbert - nah - not keen at all!
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostWhy?
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Originally posted by Conchis View PostSullivan's music I can just about take (in very small doses) but Gilbert's awful, pompous, overbearing late Victorian lyrics (which were a baleful influence on Alan Jay Lerner and his like) I can do without. I suppose I owe them a small debt of gratitude, though, for making me feel more sanguine about not liking Verdi - because early to mid-period Verdi in English sounds exactly like G&S!
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostAs I have already said I’m not keen on Gilbert, however I see no comparison with Lerner - My Fair Lady had some really good songs with very good lyrics.
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The OP has inadvertently picked a fight with a woman who entirely lacks pomposity. While southern people look up to Coronation Street, northern people look down on Only Fools and Horses. She is the exception who has had the humility to recognise its intellectual worth. I think he needs to re-engage by mentioning Grimsby Town FC which is based in Cleethorpes and whose supporters - her? - wave plastic fish before moving swiftly on to Murakami's "A Downpour of Fish" which as he will know is the stage production of his "Kafka on the Shore".
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by teamsaint View PostThat may be,( eg Charterhouse which has developed in football in recent times ) but those schools I mentioned and many others have historically had football as a/the major winter game.
Soccer, if it was mentioned at all, was "Association football" (or, of course, soccer). Nowadays soccer more of an Americanism?
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Originally posted by Conchis View PostAs Cleethorpes has been getting a bit of an (entirely justified, imo) kicking on this thread, it might be instructive for us to remember the fish-gutter turned soul maestro who constitutes its sole (ha! Double pun!) positive contribution to the world:
https://youtu.be/GUr6z-jx8q4
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Originally posted by Conchis View PostAs Cleethorpes has been getting a bit of an (entirely justified, imo) kicking on this thread, it might be instructive for us to remember the fish-gutter turned soul maestro who constitutes its sole (ha! Double pun!) positive contribution to the world:
I had a distant relative who had a farm near Grimsby, but that's all I know about Cleethorpes.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostNever heard of him. But on WS Gilbert: I'm not a fan of G&S, but when you pick on his 'Victorian pomposity', you miss the point. The pomposity is not Gilbert's: it's of the Victorian age. Gilbert is making fun of it. True, as with Shakespeare, the comedy has not always travelled well, but it travels better when it's understood.
I had a distant relative who had a farm near Grimsby, but that's all I know about Cleethorpes.
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....Well pomposity/Snobbery all rolling around in the same tub....What we need is a big melting pot, big enough to take the whirls of monoglot - keep it melting for a hundred years or more, spitting out covfefe folk on Cleethorpes Shore....
....and how near are snobbery and pomposity to....bigotry....bong ching
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