The question seems to say that the third B is the film score, not the composer thereof?
Alphabet associations - I
Collapse
This topic is closed.
X
This is a sticky topic.
X
X
-
Don Petter
-
Norfolk Born
The third 'Blech' is indeed a film score - by a famous French-born composer - to an adaptation of a famous novel by a German.
Comment
-
Norfolk Born
Comment
-
I haven't got any of this Blech question... why Anna saw a joke in there, and why anton felt it exposed a lack of classical eduction. I'm totally lost! I am sitting it out till C..."...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..."
Comment
-
-
Don Petter
-
Anna
Originally posted by Caliban View PostGetting cosy back here, ain't it Donny?
Comment
-
amateur51
Originally posted by Anna View PostWotchit, I am listening to Tchaikovsky on R3, I might get all sentimental So, if my last stab was correct, Ammy gets the C
All I got was unter den Linden, innit
I did try some (3 actually) Black Farmer's sausages tonight, cooked in th'oven and jolly nice they were too. But still not as good as the home-made ones from my local butcher in Cricklewood - O'Farrell's by name, but now run by a tall blond Polish gent and thus known round these parts as O'Farrellski's
Comment
-
Norfolk Born
Well - now we've got all the answers, who gets to set 'C'?
Leo Blech found fame as an opera conductor in Berlin, and Harry Blech as the conductor of the London Mozart Players. Maurice Jarre wrote the music for the 1979 film of Gunter Grass's 1959 novel Die Blechtrommel (The Tin Drum).
mercia was the first to mention Blech (Harry), but Anna then came up with Leo and Blechtrommel. So I think it might be time for a question from the Principality?
Comment
Comment