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"...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..."
Or could RM stop acting coy and spit the answer out!
(Isn't it infuriating when people clearly know the answer, drop a hint, and then disappear completely ..)
Or could RM stop acting coy and spit the answer out!
(Isn't it infuriating when people clearly know the answer, drop a hint, and then disappear completely ..)
Like, not playing but musing...
"...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..."
Exactly like that! In fact, I haven't this time dropped any hints this time of being accused of "waving, not drowning" !!!
BUT, I would just say ..... No, I would say to mercia it's a beautifully constructed puzzle and I'm sorry so many of the regulars have gone walkabout (which I am about to around 6-ish as a friend is cooking a curry and we intend to watch the new MasterChef)
The symbolist novelist George Rodenbach even made Bruges, Flanders into a character in his novel Bruges-la-Morte, meaning "Bruges-the-dead", which was adapted into Erich Wolfgang Korngold's opera, Die tote Stadt (The Dead City)
In 1946 Korngold wrote his Cello Concerto for Eleanor Aller Slatkin (Leonard's Mum) to play in the film Deception, and she also gave the work's first concert performance with the Los Angeles PO This performance can be found here http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tUKDuC40hHw
I was also amused by this anecdote
This is one of the pieces (Military March 1917) Korngold wrote during his military service in WW1 when he was confined to barracks outside Vienna, as music director of his regiment. After hearing Prvt Korngold play this on the piano, his commanding officer said "That's all very well Korngold but isn't it a bit fast? The men can't march to that!" to which Korngold replied:"Ah yes sir...but this is for the retreat!"
I also am stuck on March 13th. I got the Bruges-la-Morte and Leonard's mother playing when she was pregnant with his brother Fred for the premiere and can only assume tomorrow there is a significant Korngold concert somewhere in the world? Or is it his birthday/death day?
A performance of Korngold's rarely heard masterpiece, Tomorrow, Op. 33, by Bonnie Snell Schindler, mezzo-soprano with the AISOI Symphony Orchestra and Chorus...
well done RM three out of three - brilliant - and as you rightly say, the Cello Concerto and Die Tote Stadt
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