Nice touch, subcontra.
Here it is, then.
One word.
What G links the words "et", "in" and "you're"?
Nice touch, subcontra.
Here it is, then.
One word.
What G links the words "et", "in" and "you're"?
Yes, Rubbernecker. Well done.
Can you give the fuller answer, though? :-)
Well, I guess we are talking Latin for the first two, something like: "Quo fas et Gloria duc*nt" and "In Gloria dei patri" and the first two words of this for the third: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=355Fk8drgZE
Aaah, that takes me back. Laura's legs were something else.
Herewith my poser:
One word answer; which H connects a work by a Danish Flautist, an excerpt from Bradford's most famous musical son and a gipsy song by Brahms?
Yep - Laura Branningan was a dream of my teen years, too!
For the sake of accuracy, the simple(r) answer was that they are all words that follow "Gloria" - Gloria et Filii (and Glory to the Son), Gloria in Excelsis and the first words of Brannigan's biggest hit - "Gloria, you're always on the run now..."
Hirondelle? (I have an 'I' question ready should my answer be correct!)
Last edited by Norfolk Born; 16-12-10 at 16:28.
Blimey! I thought that would keep the thread quiet for at least 24 hrs by which time I would have to post another clue...
Well done, Ofcachap. Hirondelle is indeed correct. L'Hirondelle is a piece by Dane Joachim Andersen, which is of course the French for a swallow, Late Swallows was a movement arrd. by Eric Fenby from Delius's 2nd string quartet, and then we had a German swallow in the form of Brahms's Liebe Schwalbe, kleine Schwalbe from his Op.112. But you knew all that, you clever chap, Ofcachap.
So, now hit us between the I's...
Rimsky-Korsakov, Rudolf Friml and Ballard MacDonald (increasing in length).