Sorry been AWOL are we still on B?
Alphabet associations - I
Collapse
This topic is closed.
X
This is a sticky topic.
X
X
-
rubbernecker
Originally posted by Ofcachap View PostWhich small British resident beginning with 'B' inspired an American songwriting team in the year of the General Strike, a British songwriting team in the year a Labour foreign secretary resigned, and Mr R C Waldron in the year a fox was convicted of spying? The linking word occurs in all three elements, all of which are musical.
I'm thinking this might be a Blackbird, (or a 'merle noir' if we are toying with Messiaen which, knowing Ofca, is unlikely )
Bye Bye Blackbird by Ray Henderson and Mort Dixon (1926)
Blackbird by Lennon/McCartney - although the latter wrote it (1968) I think Michael Stewart may have resigned from the Wilson Government over Biafra?
I'm working on Waldron, but I'll stop if I'm barking up the wrong tree...
Comment
-
Norfolk Born
Well done, chaps! The blackbird, a small British resident, and the subject of:
Bye Bye Blackbird (Henderson and Dixon, 1926);
Blackbird Singing At The Dead of Night (McCartney, but Lennon co-credited, 1968, the year George Brown resigned as Foreign Secretary); and
If I Were A Blackbird, I'd Whistle and Sing (Ronnie Ronalde, born Ronald Charles Waldron), 1950.
Over to old Gummihals for 'C' please!
Comment
-
rubbernecker
-
rubbernecker
For the sake of completeness in the B answer one should add that the spy convicted in 1950 was Klaus Fuchs, which is German for fox
Comment
-
rubbernecker
Originally posted by mercia View Post...... R C Waldron did not write In a Monastery Garden
EDIT: My dear Mercia, if you were in my somewhat embarrassing position, would you re-edit the original post, or delete it entirely?
Comment
-
rubbernecker
Originally posted by merciais that what you chaps call a leading question?
I'm not sure what 'chaps' you mean...
Comment
Comment