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    Ams, according to Amazon's page it it available via LoveFilm. Trouble is with LF you don't get what's on top of your list, but I find them very good and you can take a payment holiday at any time. Yes, I remember that final interview with Melvyn Bragg as well

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      I'm lost in this, but I think Nigel Butterley is the toasty composer. Meditations of Thomas Traherne (1968).

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        Originally posted by Anna View Post
        Not too tough (compared to some of yours! ) It's a composer, 2 tv dramas, a composer and a performer sort of turned composer. I'll be offline now until approx 11.45
        I beg to differ. Do you do cryptic crosswords by any chance?

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          Originally posted by Dave2002 View Post
          I'm lost in this, but I think Nigel Butterley is the toasty composer. Meditations of Thomas Traherne (1968).
          Yes, Nigel Butterley (hence reference to toast upon which you spread - Utterly Butterly of course! <groan at awful pun emoticon>

          So, anton originally got the name Nigel + Kennedy, Ams got the Potter reference, you've got Mr. Butterley, that just leaves the electrifying two act Opera but as Anton got the vital word 'Nigel' I think, on balance, he gets the 'O' (if Lady Gould will let him play?)

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            Originally posted by Anna View Post
            Yes, Nigel Butterley (hence reference to toast upon which you spread - Utterly Butterly of course! <groan at awful pun emoticon>

            So, anton originally got the name Nigel + Kennedy, Ams got the Potter reference, you've got Mr. Butterley, that just leaves the electrifying two act Opera but as Anton got the vital word 'Nigel' I think, on balance, he gets the 'O' (if Lady Gould will let him play?)
            ... for completeness' sake - Nigel Osborne, The Electrification of the Soviet Union.

            (libretto by one of my old tutors )

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              Originally posted by vinteuil View Post
              ... for completeness' sake - Nigel Osborne, The Electrification of the Soviet Union.

              (libretto by one of my old tutors )
              Yes! And I have used that Osborne before, when I set 'Union' as the puzzle. So, how does that leave the scoring now?

              Libretto my one of your old tutors? Oh, please tell all vinteuil! And, are you also a famous librettist?

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                Originally posted by Anna View Post
                vinteuil! And, are you also a famous librettist?
                good lord no! me, I'm a retired obscure cultural bureaucrat and academic manqué, now just a gentleman of leisure...

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                  Originally posted by Anna View Post
                  but as Anton got the vital word 'Nigel' I think, on balance, he gets the 'O' (if Lady Gould will let him play?)
                  The weekend, by the widely accepted Lady Gould definition, has not quite started yet ......but if you can wait a while!

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                    Originally posted by vinteuil View Post
                    good lord no! me, I'm a retired obscure cultural bureaucrat and academic manqué, now just a gentleman of leisure...
                    Non, Non, Non, mon cher vinteuil, pas manqué, c'est tout simplement que vos talents n'ont pas été reconnus!!! (Excuse my French!)

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                      A bit out of practice so don't know if this is too hard or too easy

                      Which O hopefully connects

                      David Rizzio
                      The Skatalites
                      Sacred and Secular Lieder

                      all musical to varying degrees

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                        Looks good anton, Mary Queen of Scots meets Ska? I'm looking forward to the result of this Pet!

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                          It was all set to test your outstanding linguistic ability Anna

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                            Perhaps Opie?

                            No, it can't be that. Not all the Opies are musical!

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                              Sadly not Dave - as it's late a clue - your namesake Rizzio its not him but someone who pinched his name

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                                Originally posted by antongould View Post
                                someone who pinched his name
                                sorry to butt in but I think these may be Oswalds

                                James Oswald, Scottish composer (1711 - 1769) seems to have published works under the name David Rizzio
                                a trumpet player with the Skatalites is/was Oswald Baba Brooks
                                and Oswald von Wolkenstein (1376 - 1445) seems to have written some Geistliche und weltliche lieder, though I can't seem to find much info. about them


                                will Fenwicks be benefiting from your custom today?
                                Last edited by mercia; 09-07-11, 06:54.

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