Originally posted by vinteuil
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Alphabet associations - I
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Well Mahler's 2nd is said to have a "funereal opening" so I checked this one: http://www.bbc.co.uk/music/reviews/546m
Rattle's Mahler 2. The sound clip contains the warning: "Clips taken from original discs may contain strong language." I wonder what Rattle was saying?Pacta sunt servanda !!!
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Originally posted by vinteuil View PostM'learnèd Friend might like to re-read - Edward Haymes: "Wagner and the Altgermanisten - Die Wibelungen and Franz Joseph Mone"
"...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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Time for a clue, perhaps, Don? Once you've had Beech garage the Hispano-Suiza, changed out of your travelling tweeds and gargled with a couple of restorative cocktails?"...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
Phew! What a lot of esoteric claptr-, sorry, information I seem to have sparked off.
You all forget what a simple soul I am (in spite of Caliban's flattering image).
Everything is musical - the first two inherently and the third by a well-known association.
Maybe that will help for a starting clue? (I am now fully monitoring your transmissions, subject to my eventual bedtime, which will be announced in due course.)
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Don Petter
Sounds very good, fhg, and it might even be a completely satisfactory parallel answer, but it's not what I've got.
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Don Petter
Originally posted by Norfolk Born View PostAha! North Shields....
But not wanted on this voyage. (Flay has one correct word which is very germane to part one.)
Unlike you night birds, I need my beauty sleep, so am heading in that direction shortly. If you need another clue, I'll leave this sealed envelope - No, that won't really work electronically, will it?
All right then: Three composers born in three successive centuries are involved.
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Don Petter
In view of my alphabetic duties, I was up at the crack of nine today, but all is quiet. Perhaps a silent cry for help?
Well, you should all know me by now as a stalwart, middle-of-the-road, down-to-earth, nicky-tams sort of man. So none of your Barry Manilows or poncy film scores.
Time for a Gross Loydman 'Through the Keyhole' type summing up of what we are looking for:
A musical poem, perhaps a voyage, by a composer in the far (diagonal) North (see Flay's post for checklist).
A musical regal person, demanding (in two senses) by another composer.
The start of something to do with the dead, associated musically with a third composer. (Actually, more than the start, a recurring theme.)
The three composers span three centuries by birth, not necessarily in the above order.
The required N appears in the title of items one and two, and twice in the content of three.
Hew leeves in a house like this?
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