Originally Posted by cloughie The J is part of the name of two of the composers and a work by the other. Last gasp, Joseph, then I logg off and thank you, goodnight.
Originally Posted by Anna Last gasp, Joseph, then I logg off and thank you, goodnight. Not Joseph either.
Originally Posted by cloughie Short but J links 3 composers. JAMes Hook JAMes Horner JAMes Macmillan
Originally Posted by cloughie Short but J links 3 composers. ... is the word links significant? Might we, fr'instance, be talking joins - joints - junctions - junctures ??
Originally Posted by cloughie The J is part of the name of two of the composers and a work by the other. Hmm; Anna's Joseph fits the bill (Haydn, Holbrooke & Beethoven's Cantata on the Death of Emporer Joseph) - I think a little extra hint might be useful?
Originally Posted by cloughie The J is part of the name of two of the composers and a work by the other. I'm not sure what that means, cloughie. Is the J part of the name of a work by the other, or is it a work by the other?
Originally Posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte Hmm; Anna's Joseph fits the bill At last recognition!!
Last edited by Anna; 14-03-12 at 18:06. Reason: typos
Originally Posted by Anna At last recognition!!
"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
Originally Posted by Caliban Thanks awfully Ducks, that is appreciated but life happens and we have to deal with it, painful as it is
Originally Posted by Anna At last recognition!! Recognition, indeed Anna, but wrong nevertheless.
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