Alphabet associations - I

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  • Anna

    OK, this I think is reasonably easy:

    B is a dreadful event on which an opera is loosely based and forms part of a famous film, a hopeful explorer who couldn’t have benefited from the products of another B (but we can), a famous Welsh swashbuckler and a 17th century comedy.

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    • Tapiola
      Full Member
      • Jan 2011
      • 1688

      Originally posted by Caliban View Post
      Gawain is one of my favoruite things in literature (it gets a reading every other New Year or so)... but I didn't twig the meeting connection
      A great poem. Did you see the Simon Armitage programme a year or so ago on BBC4? I thought it was great.

      Originally posted by Caliban View Post
      Likely to be a hectic day today as I am holding the fort while others swan off on holiday... not sure how much I'll be online So the concept of a strawberry Fancy is much welcomed!
      Moi aussi. A day of meetings which annoyingly coincides with my last day of work for a fortnight. These meetings usually involve a lot of mopping up afterwards...

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      • Anna

        Originally posted by Caliban View Post

        Gawain is one of my favoruite things in literature (it gets a reading every other New Year or so)
        Do you read it in the original or in translation, if the latter which one do you have?

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        • mercia
          Full Member
          • Nov 2010
          • 8920

          not sure I have everybody here, but anyway

          Bartholomew Roberts, Welsh pirate (1682 - 1722) known as Black Bart (though not the Black Bart of the American West), born at Little Newcastle. One of four pirate captains named in R L Stevenson's Treasure Island. (I could go on ....)
          St Bartholomew's Day Massacre (1572, with up to 30,000 dead) featuring in Meyerbeer's Les Huguenots and D W Griffith's Intolerance
          Bartholomew Diaz or Bartholomeu Dias, explorer, first to round Cape of Good Hope
          not quite sure whose invention he could have benefitted from, possibly either George Bartholomew (concrete pavements!) or Harry Bartholomew (Bartlane cable picture transmission system), no, more likely William Hamond Batholomew, canal engineer (Aire and Calder navigation)
          Bartholomew Fayre by Ben Jonson

          now who have I missed out?

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          • Anna

            Well done mercia, brilliantly solved!! The product Bartholomew Diaz could have found useful would be a map by John Bartholomew & Son, cartographers (now known as CollinsBartholomew) I was going to throw in one half of a famous duo (Eric Bartholomew who became Eric Morecombe) as another clue. I think they based Pirates of the Caribbean on Roberts the Pirate and there is also a vocal score about him by Alun Hoddinott.

            Now, let's C what you can come up with!

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            • mercia
              Full Member
              • Nov 2010
              • 8920

              Originally posted by Anna View Post
              map by John Bartholomew & Son
              of course

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              • Nick Armstrong
                Host
                • Nov 2010
                • 26540

                Originally posted by Anna View Post
                Do you read it in the original or in translation, if the latter which one do you have?
                I have the original and have battled with it... but for Winter holiday reading, I use a translation - I have the old Penguin version I used at school (can't remember who did it), Tolkein's version and Simon Armitage's new one. And yes his TV prog was ace, Taps
                "...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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                • mercia
                  Full Member
                  • Nov 2010
                  • 8920

                  Originally posted by Anna View Post
                  let's C what you can come up with
                  not a lot, as Mr Daniels might say

                  a C to connect

                  - an exponent of drone minimalism
                  - a triple opera premiered 1830
                  - a 1972 Fat Knight debut
                  - Bernie's appoggiatura novel

                  Comment

                  • mercia
                    Full Member
                    • Nov 2010
                    • 8920

                    wo - for a minute I thought we had a rival game

                    Alphabetical List of Composers

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                    • rubbernecker

                      Originally posted by mercia View Post
                      not a lot, as Mr Daniels might say

                      a C to connect

                      - an exponent of drone minimalism
                      - a triple opera premiered 1830
                      - a 1972 Fat Knight debut
                      - Bernie's appoggiatura novel
                      After a little thought (and a lot of googling):

                      Catherine

                      - Catherine Christer Hennix
                      - Les Trois Catherine by Adolphe Adam 1830
                      - Catherine Malfitano made her debut in Falstaff in Denver in 1972
                      - Catherine McKenna is the composer in Bernard McLaverty's novel Grace Notes

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                      • mercia
                        Full Member
                        • Nov 2010
                        • 8920

                        Originally posted by rubbernecker View Post


                        beautifully presented and timed so that I can abandon my computer for a while

                        D for "doing-my-head-in"

                        Comment

                        • Tapiola
                          Full Member
                          • Jan 2011
                          • 1688

                          Fantastic work, rubbers...

                          I had made no inroads at all on this one.

                          early

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                          • rubbernecker

                            Which D (increasing in length) is:
                            - one who attained a Derby first;
                            - a character in a Chaucerian opera;
                            - a Roman-sounding renaissance lutenist?

                            Comment

                            • mercia
                              Full Member
                              • Nov 2010
                              • 8920

                              Originally posted by rubbernecker View Post
                              increasing in length
                              Diomed won the inaugural Epsom Derby (1780)
                              Diomede, prince of Argos in Walton's Troilus & Cressida
                              Diomedes Cato, Italian composer & lutenist (though lived and worked in Poland)

                              neat question, liked that

                              Comment

                              • rubbernecker

                                Originally posted by mercia View Post
                                Diomed won the inaugural Epsom Derby (1780)
                                Diomede, prince of Argos in Walton's Troilus & Cressida
                                Diomedes Cato, Italian composer & lutenist (though lived and worked in Poland)

                                neat question, liked that
                                Thanks. Brilliant work, Mercia

                                Your E...

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