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Thread: Alphabet associations

  1. #16481
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    Quote Originally Posted by subcontrabass View Post
    And for Parry?
    The only connection I can find is that he was a buddy of Arthur Sullivan.

  2. #16482
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    Quote Originally Posted by cloughie View Post
    The only connection I can find is that he was a buddy of Arthur Sullivan.
    Look for another opera involving King Arthur.

  3. #16483

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    Should we be thinking about the first opera with a libretto in Welsh?

  4. #16484

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    Quote Originally Posted by subcontrabass View Post
    Look for another opera involving King Arthur.
    Ah; then scrub my question above.

  5. #16485
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    Quote Originally Posted by subcontrabass View Post
    Look for another opera involving King Arthur.
    Guenever

  6. #16486
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    Quote Originally Posted by cloughie View Post
    Guenever
    Parry's only opera, still, I think, unperformed. It apparently exists in a German version as well as in English.

    I think cloughie got two out of the three, and so has the honour of a B.

  7. #16487
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    Gosh, how it all moves on, and on, ad infinitum (and ad nauseam ) when you miss a day here...

    I was still on the V, trying to find how Van Morrison could be the 1970s crooner and at the same time a bridge

    But now we're Parrying with Excalibur!

  8. #16488
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    Quote Originally Posted by subcontrabass View Post
    Parry's only opera, still, I think, unperformed. It apparently exists in a German version as well as in English.

    I think cloughie got two out of the three, and so has the honour of a B.
    I'll pass if I may, merc got Arthur, my results were was just a little Google poaching!

  9. #16489
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    is there a hiatus ?

    B connecting

    part of a 1922 Three Choirs commission
    opus 119, words by Coleridge
    Ross Gorman

  10. #16490
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    Quote Originally Posted by mercia View Post
    is there a hiatus ?

    B connecting

    part of a 1922 Three Choirs commission
    opus 119, words by Coleridge
    Ross Gorman
    Blue:

    Bliss: A Colour Symphony, 3rd movement

    Stanford: The Blue Bird, op 119, no 3, words by Mary Coleridge

    Ross Gorman was the clarinettist in the first performance of Rhapsody in Blue

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