That put an end to all the jollity, didn't it?
Alphabet associations - I
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Don Petter
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Anna
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Don Petter
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Originally posted by Anna View PostI've just seen Caliban's steamy loco sketch - brilliant. It really made me laugh. Thanks
I too must retire after an evening off-forum. We shall tackle Don's rather testing A in the morning."...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
Morning All!
No deluge of supposition and invention yet. We'll let things simmer for a while, maybe.
I'll be going out and about later, but will take my trusty Android gizmo with me so may be able to look in on you if I can find a handy Wetherspoons while SWMBO spends all the housekeeping.
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Originally posted by OFCACHAP View Post...wordplay of the highest order, I would say. Hard to know whether to award the palm to you, Anna, or to whoever came up with David Platt's response to his mother's use of the phrase 'pushing the boat out'.
"...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
Got back home feeling guilty because in spite of two attempts I hadn't managed to get on line during the day. (Wi-Fi doesn't seem to have got to Haywards Heath yet.)
It hasn't really mattered, as the thread is in deathly silence.
Time for a clue? Well, not too much yet, as the evening denizens may not yet be in play. Let me just say for the moment that one should be looking across the pond.
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BetweenTheStaves
Probably way off beam but it wouldn't have anything to do with Aaron Copland? He was very interested in jazz and took Koussevitzky to some jazz clubs in NY and Koussevitzky commented that the music was just like gypsies.
Straw....clutching
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Don Petter
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rubbernecker
Is it Georges Antheil?
He wrote a first symphony subtitled Zingareska in 1922, a Jazz Symphony in 1925 and Decatur at Algiers in 1943 which I'm optimistically guessing is something to do with the US naval commander Stephen Decatur who waged war against Pirates?
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Don Petter
Originally posted by rubbernecker View PostIs it Georges Antheil?
He wrote a first symphony subtitled Zingareska in 1922, a Jazz Symphony in 1925 and Decatur at Algiers in 1943 which I'm optimistically guessing is something to do with the US naval commander Stephen Decatur who waged war against Pirates?
An interesting chap, it would seem (1900-1959). He has been described as an enfant terrible, but could also be called a polymath or even renaissance man. His non-musical expertise included female endocrinology, writing an agony aunt column, a mystery novel and torpedoes.
Instruments in his most famous work, Ballet Mechanique, included a siren and three aircraft propellors (not to mention 18 pianos).
[Sorry about delay in replying - just got back in.]
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