so nothing to do with Wagner's father-in-law (him again) being called lazybones once (or more than once)
Alphabet associations - I
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Originally posted by mercia View Postwell Siegfried Wagner (if i'm staying with Wagner) wrote a symphonic poem, Gluck (with umlaut)
if I knew what the German for lazybones was, that might (perhaps) help
Wahnfried-Idyll (1918)
"...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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rubbernecker
Originally posted by mercia View Postwell Siegfried Wagner (if i'm staying with Wagner) wrote a symphonic poem, Gluck (with umlaut)
if I knew what the German for lazybones was, that might (perhaps) help
Wahnfried-Idyll (1918)
Siegfried Wagner was the answer.
Can I offer you the choice of X, Y or Z?
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rubbernecker
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I think I have the Sir Michael clue and the Dmitri, the latter of which is something to do with a conductor who died in 2002.
Of the feline and Hensel connections, I have as yet not a clue.
But what a lovely day it has been. My trip under the sun and into the city centre, which was heaving with race-goers in all their splendour, was spoiled only by the failure, of our two Waterstone shops, to have any stock related the world of classical music.
If they don't have it, they can't sell it.
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