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Yes indeed, but it has me in a flippin' flap too! That bit I can't get.
Shall I move on and claim the E?
p.s. hello Tapiola
Wiki says she had a hit called White Flag - flags flap
Go for it Flay with the E, I think
"...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..."
Shocking works: one operatic, one in dance, both with Royal Opera House UK premieres. A lamentable third, an opera civilly updated, was premiered at The Met.
Two Es in fact, sounding the same but spelling minimally varied.*
* amended as #18447 - When I say two Es, I really mean it is the same E with two slightly diferent spellings <doh>
Last edited by Flay; 26-04-12, 08:19.
Reason: as #18447
Dido's widely emulated hairstyle became known as the "Dido flip"
Did you emulate her, Flay?
"...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..."
Dido's widely emulated hairstyle became known as the "Dido flip"
Sorry, everyone (and welcome back, Tapioca! ) - I got waylaid by Betany Hughes and her divine women.
And to confirm:
D for Dido, who, in Purcell's opera, beseeched us "Remember me", who didn't feature in the first "part" of Berlioz's spliced Les Troyens, "La Prise de Troie" which the composer never saw; and the trend-setting coiffeur of Ms Armstrong:
Shocking works: one operatic, one in dance, both with Royal Opera House UK premieres. A lamentable third, an opera civilly updated, was premiered at The Met.
Two Es in fact, sounding the same but spelling minimally varied.
When I say two Es, I really mean it is the same E with two slightly diferent spellings <doh>
Last we spoke, you asked me about the Elizabeth Wilson Shostakovich book. Well, in the interim I have given it a good old read and I am delighted to report that it is very highly recommended. Some stunningly enlightening interviews therein. For example, illuminating discussions on the late quartets and the Michelangelo songs - from some of the original performers of these works, who subsequently recorded them on disc. Fabulous.
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