Alphabet associations - I

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  • Don Petter

    Permission to drip acknowledged! I shall drip further as the need dictates.

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    • Don Petter

      I am about to got out for an hour or two. In the words of Through the Keyhole, let us see what we have found:

      The best approach to the required person might be to identify a modern namesake who was fictitious, only known audibly, and not of the highest intelligence.

      [Who leeves inn a howwse like theese?]

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      • Tapiola
        Full Member
        • Jan 2011
        • 1688

        Eccles?

        Eccles in The Goon Show was a bit dim, and heard rather than seen;
        Eccles is abbreviation for Book of Ecclesiastes, which apparently influenced Shakespeare's "Hamlet";
        Err...
        That's it.

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        • Tapiola
          Full Member
          • Jan 2011
          • 1688

          Wikipedia has just informed me that Messiaen's opera on Francis of Assisi opens with words from Ecclesiastes: "I am afraid on the road, when the windows grow larger and more obscure, and when the leaves of the poinsettia no longer turn red." "I am afraid on the road, when, about to die, the tiare flower is no longer perfumed. Behold! The invisible, the invisible is seen…"

          But is Messiaen contemporary enough?

          So, I guess my guess is (John) Eccles, Master of the King's Music, who according to Wiki "...wrote a large amount of incidental music including music for William Congreve's Love for Love, John Dryden's The Spanish Friar and William Shakespeare's Macbeth. Jointly with Henry Purcell he wrote incidental music for Thomas d'Urfey's Don Quixote."
          Last edited by Tapiola; 25-02-11, 12:30.

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          • Norfolk Born

            Originally posted by Tapiola View Post
            Eccles in The Goon Show was a bit dim, and heard rather than seen.
            Neddy Seagoon: Eccles, things are serious - the odds against us are ten to one.
            Eccles: Ten to one - time for lunch!

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            • Nick Armstrong
              Host
              • Nov 2010
              • 26519

              Originally posted by OFCACHAP View Post
              Neddy Seagoon: Eccles, things are serious - the odds against us are ten to one.
              Eccles: Ten to one - time for lunch!


              Thought I might have a chance with this one. Sounds as if you may have got it with Eccles.

              I've been enjoying the thread about Tom Service's Guardian blog piece about an audience member ruining the end of Mahler 3.
              "...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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              • Don Petter

                Originally posted by Tapiola View Post
                Wikipedia has just informed me that Messiaen's opera on Francis of Assisi opens with words from Ecclesiastes: "I am afraid on the road, when the windows grow larger and more obscure, and when the leaves of the poinsettia no longer turn red." "I am afraid on the road, when, about to die, the tiare flower is no longer perfumed. Behold! The invisible, the invisible is seen…"

                But is Messiaen contemporary enough?

                So, I guess my guess is (John) Eccles, Master of the King's Music, who according to Wiki "...wrote a large amount of incidental music including music for William Congreve's Love for Love, John Dryden's The Spanish Friar and William Shakespeare's Macbeth. Jointly with Henry Purcell he wrote incidental music for Thomas d'Urfey's Don Quixote."
                Tapiola,

                You win! Sorry I wasn't around to applaud you across the line, and you've fallen into one of my little traps, but we won't penalise you for that, as you got all the answers, I think.

                Here is the stored solution:

                What E was not at all dumb and, incidentally, helped some of our greatest playwrights and a contemporary composer?

                Composer John Eccles (1668-1735), who should not be confused with the well-known Goon, wrote incidental music for plays by Congreve, Shakespeare and Dryden as well as collaborating with their contemporary, Henry Purcell, for another stage work.

                You will see that 'contemporary' referred to the playwrights, and not the present time. Meant to throw you all off scent, I'm afraid.

                Your turn with the baton, now labelled 'F'.

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                • Tapiola
                  Full Member
                  • Jan 2011
                  • 1688

                  Nice clue, Don, and devious...

                  This F may be straigtforward.

                  What alliterative F links Kenneth Williams and works by Falla and Liszt?

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                  • vinteuil
                    Full Member
                    • Nov 2010
                    • 12772

                    Originally posted by Tapiola View Post
                    .

                    What alliterative F links Kenneth Williams and works by Falla and Liszt?
                    Not that lost ode to a gazeous lemon drink - Fanta Bullosa?

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                    • Don Petter

                      Originally posted by hercule
                      Fuego Fatuo
                      Unfinished, often like Fanta in my experience.

                      (Mine was the Opera, 1919)
                      Last edited by Guest; 25-02-11, 16:23. Reason: Counter-edit, explaining after rival edit.

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                      • Don Petter

                        Without looking anything up, could we be after one of Kenneth Williams' outrageous names in the Carry On films?

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                        • subcontrabass
                          Full Member
                          • Nov 2010
                          • 2780

                          Originally posted by hercule
                          Fuego Fatuo (Cancion del) from El amor brujo - Song of the Will-o-the-wisp - 1981 cartoon series with voices provided by KW

                          Can't find the Liszt though

                          I know googling is frowned upon but it's the only way I can keep up with you chaps
                          Googling throws up this: "Transcendental Etude No. 5 in B-flat "Feux Follets" (Will o' the Wisp) is the fifth etude of the set of twelve Transcendental Etudes by Franz Liszt."

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                          • Don Petter

                            Kenneth Williams narrated for a children's cartoon on TV in 1980 which was called Willo the Wisp.

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                            • Tapiola
                              Full Member
                              • Jan 2011
                              • 1688

                              Sorry guys, been away. Yes the answer on my card is Feux Follets for divers reasons explained above.

                              Who now though for G? hercule, with 2 out of 3?

                              Comment

                              • subcontrabass
                                Full Member
                                • Nov 2010
                                • 2780

                                Originally posted by hercule
                                er, well I didn't get Feux Follets - SubC is welcome to it as far as I'm concerned
                                No, this one is yours. You got the bulk of it. I just filled in the odd gap.

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