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some hard work going on here - it is certainly one of those, I'm just pondering whether if I tell you exactly which one that will give the answer away immediately
some hard work going on here - it is certainly one of those, I'm just pondering whether if I tell you exactly which one that will give the answer away immediately
ok - it's the Adirondack
Cheers mercs - you know me - even the most searingly obvious clue can often be not the slightest use!
Later: Ooooh there's a place called Marble Falls in the Adirondacks - not one solitary letter u in the whole thing
It's fascinating watching this, like a comedy version of Wimbledon
Great work on a great question, ams and mercs
I've no idea about the solution, but ammy hacking his way through the Undergrowth...
"...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..."
EDIT ......... that might be used in a composition
Tis the name of the tune for 'Nearer my god to thee' composed by Sarah Flower Adams. It is what the band played as the Titanic sank.
According to wiki:
"A dramatic paraphrase of the hymn tune was written for wind band by the Danish composer, Carl Nielsen. His version includes a musical rendition of the collision between boat and iceberg.[19] The composer Sigfrid Karg-Elert, moved by the Titanic tragedy, wrote six works based on the "Bethany" setting, including an organ fantasia.[20] "Bethany" is also quoted in Charles Ives's fourth symphony.[21] The French organist Joseph Bonnet wrote "In Memoriam – Titanic", the first of his Douze Pièces, Op. 10, based on the tune Horbury. It was published the year after the Titanic sank.[22]
The hymn even made its way briefly onto the operatic stage. The singer Emma Abbott, prompted by "her uncompromising and grotesque puritanism" rewrote La traviata so that Violetta expired singing not Verdi's Addio del passato, but Nearer my God to Thee"
** slumps back in chair, exhausted and utterly defeated**
"Bethany" is also quoted in Charles Ives's ........... symphony
** slumps back in chair, exhausted and utterly defeated**
you're there (nearly)
sorry about the work involved
people obviously don't cheat like I do. if I was answering this I would put "marble" "Adirondack" and "composer" into a search box and found an answer
sorry about the work involved
people obviously don't cheat like I do. if I was answering this I would put "marble" "Adirondack" and "composer" into a search box and found an answer
Lawks mercs - am I now looking for a composer beginning with U?
Lawks mercs - am I now looking for a composer beginning with U?
Just follow the master, ams! As mercia says, put the words into google and have a look down the results!
Go for it - you deserve it!
Maybe another little bonus question to keep us going?
I think it's rather good to have these 'wild card' questions to tide things over where question setters are unavoidably detained!
Nice one mercs!
"...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..."
no, U is not a composer, but obviously a composer is involved
time for misery ending and a well-deserved lie down/drink/whatever for ammie
the answer is Universe Symphony by Charles Ives, conceived in the Adirondack Mountains, making use of a "slab of marble" in the percussion section and quoting the hymn tune Bethany
well what can I say, it passed the time in a not very comfortable way .......... poor ammie
I think the W question will be of a much higher standard (couldn't be lower )
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