Originally posted by subcontrabass
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Alphabet associations - I
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rubbernecker
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rubbernecker
OK, that's long enough.
A bit more testing: What J was responsible for an avuncular ballet, a clementine passacaglia as well as four books about music?
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rubbernecker
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Hang on, hang on...! A chap goes to a meeting for a couple of hours and things accelerate from F to J in no time...
But we never got an explicit answer to F did we? We got as far as Epinards and Florrie Foster Whatsername, plus an enigmatic Rubberknickers reference to Eggs Florentine... ok, there's spinach in that... And Florence - Florentine...
So what was the Spring Festival with F ????
Yours, trailing in everyone's wake
Caliban"...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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Originally posted by Caliban View PostHang on, hang on...! A chap goes to a meeting for a couple of hours and things accelerate from F to J in no time...
But we never got an explicit answer to F did we? We got as far as Epinards and Florrie Foster Whatsername, plus an enigmatic Rubberknickers reference to Eggs Florentine... ok, there's spinach in that... And Florence - Florentine...
So what was the Spring Festival with F ????
Yours, trailing in everyone's wake
Caliban
Stendhal's veg = spinach; the culinary / gastronomic term for stuff with spinach = florentine (eggs florentine, tomatoes a la florentine, fillets of sole florentine)
the spring festival = Maggio Musicale Fiorentino [an annual opera festival in Florence which was founded in April 1933 by conductor Vittorio Gui with the aim of presenting contemporary and forgotten operas in visually dramatic productions. It was the first music festival in Italy. The first opera presented was Verdi's early Nabucco, his early operas then being rarely staged. It now takes place between late April, May and into June, typically with four operas. The first festival's success led to it becoming a biennial event in 1937 with the presentation of nine operas, but after 1937, it became an annual festival, except during the Second World War. Performances take place in the Teatro Comunale and Teatro Piccolo (as the name suggests, for smaller-scale operas), plus the historic Teatro della Pergola. The present Artistic Director is Paolo Arcร and, since 1985, the principal conductor is Zubin Mehta.]
and Florence Foster-Jenkins (the world's worst singer)
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Postsorry, Caliban !
Stendhal's veg = spinach; the culinary / gastronomic term for stuff with spinach = florentine (eggs florentine, tomatoes a la florentine, fillets of sole florentine)
the spring festival = Maggio Musicale Fiorentino [an annual opera festival in Florence which was founded in April 1933 by conductor Vittorio Gui with the aim of presenting contemporary and forgotten operas in visually dramatic productions. It was the first music festival in Italy. The first opera presented was Verdi's early Nabucco, his early operas then being rarely staged. It now takes place between late April, May and into June, typically with four operas. The first festival's success led to it becoming a biennial event in 1937 with the presentation of nine operas, but after 1937, it became an annual festival, except during the Second World War. Performances take place in the Teatro Comunale and Teatro Piccolo (as the name suggests, for smaller-scale operas), plus the historic Teatro della Pergola. The present Artistic Director is Paolo Arcร and, since 1985, the principal conductor is Zubin Mehta.]
and Florence Foster-Jenkins (the world's worst singer)"...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 herculeJoan left to be replaced by Jennifer who in turn left to be replaced by Jeffrey.
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Don Petter
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Don Petter
Originally posted by herculeWell done! That's who I was after, rather an unfair question (from me) since I have subsequently found several other past-member names.
David Harrington, John Sherba, Hank Dutt, Joan Jeanrenaud, Jennifer Culp, Jeffrey Zeigler.
I'm sure you'll have a much better L question.
According to my Dictionnaire des Interprรจtes, from 1995, the personnel up to then had been:
V1: David Harrington (1973-)
V2: James Shaellenberger (1973-75)
Roy Lewis (1975-77)
Ella Gray (1977-78)
John Sherba (1978-)
VA: Tim Kilian (1973-76)
Michael Jones (1976-77)
Hawle Dutt (sic) (1977-)
VC: Walter Gray (1973-78)
Joan Dutcher Jeanrenaud (1978-)
For me then, it's L, but I'll see what I can do. Watch this space.
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Don Petter
Sorry about the delay - had to feed the inner man while I was pondering. Here's your L:
Given a melodious container by a mischievous lady connected with a mysterious pool, who might you expect to conjure up?
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rubbernecker
Originally posted by Don Petter View PostSorry about the delay - had to feed the inner man while I was pondering. Here's your L:
Given a melodious container by a mischievous lady connected with a mysterious pool, who might you expect to conjure up?
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rubbernecker
Originally posted by Don Petter View PostYou've got it! I tried to mislead a bit with the wording, but it was really the plain old three paraphrases.
We await your M ...
Which M connects a Teutonic national opera, a group of American melodies, and a monarchical ballet?
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Don Petter
Originally posted by rubbernecker View PostThe only reason I got it was the fact that I remembered from my schooldays Lyadov's Enchanted Lake as being a makeweight from the Svetlanov set of Tchaikovsky Symphonies, and I thought a witch was probably involved, making it Russian. I'm not familiar with the piano miniatures which make up the snuffbox.
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Don Petter
Originally posted by rubbernecker View PostWhich M connects a Teutonic national opera, a group of American melodies, and a monarchical ballet?
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