Cheers Vinty!
Forget football, are we talking about Loughran?
... err, "Good for a bet"?
Cheers Vinty!
Forget football, are we talking about Loughran?
... err, "Good for a bet"?
i wouldn't have got Angus without the "grafting" of others
great question![]()
Well, thanks to Vinty, I got the pun "loch ran" (for the celtic water), mercs got Angus (of whom I'd previously never) for the Bet.
I presumed everything led to James, the principal conductor of the Hallé. But that was in the '70s, not the "late '60s", so I'm stumped at the Sheffield reference.
Cheers, ams
Regrettably I have not delved even superficially into this book as yet. I received it on Tuesday, quite out of the blue. Being a shallow type, I immediately went for the photographs and have skimmed the index and its extensive list of personalia - a cast o' thousands! The book does indeed seem to have been very well received.
All correct. My memory and the dates may have misled you, but not drastically. Loughran was HO conductor from 1970 or so but before did conduct the orchestra - The Sheffield Philharmonic Concerts had the Halle as its resident orch for many years. I actually first saw JL at Sheffield conducting the Munich Phil deputising for Kempe - His Brahms 1 was a cracker! The other interesting competitor for the Halle post Barbirolli was Arvid Jansons (his son seems to have done not too badly with the baton) whom I was lucky enough to see conducting the Leningrad Phil at Sheffield.
Seems combined AA brains go there. We need a M please - toss the dice and decide whom!
"The isle is full of noises... Sounds, and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not"
The Tempest, Act III scene 2 ll 148-9