Originally posted by Caliban
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Alphabet associations - I
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Anna
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... if Caliban is agreeable - I can probably summon up an S in the next hour....
Morning Anna, thanks! I thought you deserved a shot for your hard work yesterday!
Hope all had a pleasant Easter weekend. Did any Welsh lambs find a happy consummation in your kitchen Anna?"...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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okely-dokely...
S
Probably not a vintage one, but anyway - of the three, the most famous was the son of a musician born in 1685 - the least famous a police chief who helped the young Verdi - and the other one, even if something of an add-on, gave Vienna the waltz while influencing Mozart, which is after all something special.
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Not making much headway here... The police chief who helped Verdi was a "T" and I can't connect any "S"s for the moment for the other two...
A puzzle, Monsieur Vinteuil. I must go out now, maybe I shall return to a solution from someone. I think amateur51 is too busy baiting the Christians north of the border..."...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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Tentatively :
Vicente Martin y Soler (1754-1806) included a waltz in his opera “Una cosa rara” which caught the attention of Mozart, leading him to include a waltz in Don Giovanni.
Temistocle Solera wrote the lyrics for Va piensero but what police connections. I think I am up the wrong tree, here
I do not know the names of all of Bach’s children but since JS was born in 1685, I am assuming that S is also one of them
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amateur51
Crikey, Angle, I'm reet impressed.
I've been struggling under the delusion that vinteuil is having a merry prank and the answer is Strauss but I can't make it fit
No change there then
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Angle - no need to be tentative - you're winning here!
Martin y Soler ("something of an add on") in Una Cosa Rara ("some thing special") not only gave Mozart that tune in Don Giovanni - but also introduced the waltz to the Viennese
Temistocle Solera provided librettos for Oberto, Nabucco, i Lombardi, Attila etc - he was superintendent of police against brigandage in Basilicata, chief of police in several cities, and in charge of organizing the police for the Khedive of Egypt...
The other Soler is the most famous one...Last edited by vinteuil; 26-04-11, 12:02.
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amateur51
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Norfolk Born
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