Game #195: Discography
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Re: Game #195: Discography
I'm noticing that a few of the names in List B have the same first letter in their first & last names (Farrah Fawcett, Steve Stevens, Mitch McConnell, etc.). Could this be a clue to the Tangredi?
- themanwho
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Re: Game #195: Discography
B-83. This playwright won his third Pulitzer Prize for an experimental nine-act play.
Eugene O'Neill, Strange Interlude
Eugene O'Neill, Strange Interlude
"I will win BIG on a game show this coming year!" - since gsabc isn't using it any more.
- franktangredi
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Re: Game #195: Discography
So what can I do to help?
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Re: Game #195: Discography
I looked up some answers for Part B just to get this game going again.
B-15. His discoveries in the field of immunology led him to become the first Belgian to win the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
JULES BORDET
B-18. He delivered the last line – which was also the title – of a popular 1960s all-star comedy. (No, not that popular 1960s all-star comedy … though he appeared in that one as well.)
BEN BLUE
B-19. This Nobel laureate was a key figure in the Trümmerliteratur ("rubble literature") movement that arose in postwar Germany.
HEINRICH BOLL
B-25. This jurist – the first Supreme Court Justice to hire a law clerk – was succeeded on the bench by Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.
HORACE GREY
B-45. A hero of the Franco-PrussianWar, he became known as General Revanche for his extreme nationalism and desire to avenge France’s defeat.
GEORGES ERNEST BOULANGER
B-46. This philosopher posited a system of three worlds in which World One was the physical world, World Two was the world of the mind, and World Three was the body of human knowledge.
KARL POPPER
B-55. A member of the Will Eisner Award Hall of Fame, this underground cartoonist is best known for his creation of a hedonistic wizard whose mystical hat covers his entire body down to his legs.
VAUGHN BODE
B-71. This architect’s work included the triumphal arch in Washington Square Park, the Boston Public Library, and an arena that was demolished in 1925.
STANFORD WHITE
B-77. This boxer, who took his ring name from a fast-firing weapon, held the World Light Heavyweight title for two years in the early 1950s.
JOEY MAXIM
B-80. The last words of this war criminal– convicted at Nuremberg for coordinating slave labor for the Third Reich – were, “I die an innocent man, my sentence is unjust. God protect Germany! May it live and one day become great again! God protect my family."
FRITZ SAUCKEL
B-89. Though he spent much of his career painting dogs and horses, this Victorian artist also created the lion sculptures in Trafalgar Square.
EDWIN LANDSEER
B-15. His discoveries in the field of immunology led him to become the first Belgian to win the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
JULES BORDET
B-18. He delivered the last line – which was also the title – of a popular 1960s all-star comedy. (No, not that popular 1960s all-star comedy … though he appeared in that one as well.)
BEN BLUE
B-19. This Nobel laureate was a key figure in the Trümmerliteratur ("rubble literature") movement that arose in postwar Germany.
HEINRICH BOLL
B-25. This jurist – the first Supreme Court Justice to hire a law clerk – was succeeded on the bench by Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.
HORACE GREY
B-45. A hero of the Franco-PrussianWar, he became known as General Revanche for his extreme nationalism and desire to avenge France’s defeat.
GEORGES ERNEST BOULANGER
B-46. This philosopher posited a system of three worlds in which World One was the physical world, World Two was the world of the mind, and World Three was the body of human knowledge.
KARL POPPER
B-55. A member of the Will Eisner Award Hall of Fame, this underground cartoonist is best known for his creation of a hedonistic wizard whose mystical hat covers his entire body down to his legs.
VAUGHN BODE
B-71. This architect’s work included the triumphal arch in Washington Square Park, the Boston Public Library, and an arena that was demolished in 1925.
STANFORD WHITE
B-77. This boxer, who took his ring name from a fast-firing weapon, held the World Light Heavyweight title for two years in the early 1950s.
JOEY MAXIM
B-80. The last words of this war criminal– convicted at Nuremberg for coordinating slave labor for the Third Reich – were, “I die an innocent man, my sentence is unjust. God protect Germany! May it live and one day become great again! God protect my family."
FRITZ SAUCKEL
B-89. Though he spent much of his career painting dogs and horses, this Victorian artist also created the lion sculptures in Trafalgar Square.
EDWIN LANDSEER
- franktangredi
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Re: Game #195: Discography
I think I finally came up with something that was too hard to find. Should I give a bigger hint - such as giving you one correct match and letting you work from there - or just throw in the towel?
Sorry this one was so hard.
Sorry this one was so hard.
- jarnon
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Re: Game #195: Discography
Could you give us a clue to the other wrong answer (besides Garibaldi)? I looked and looked but can't find it.franktangredi wrote:I think I finally came up with something that was too hard to find. Should I give a bigger hint - such as giving you one correct match and letting you work from there - or just throw in the towel?
Sorry this one was so hard.
Слава Україні!
עם ישראל חי
עם ישראל חי
- franktangredi
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Re: Game #195: Discography
B-76 is still wrong. Oort fulfills half of the requirements of the clue, but someone else fits both.jarnon wrote:Could you give us a clue to the other wrong answer (besides Garibaldi)? I looked and looked but can't find it.franktangredi wrote:I think I finally came up with something that was too hard to find. Should I give a bigger hint - such as giving you one correct match and letting you work from there - or just throw in the towel?
Sorry this one was so hard.
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Re: Game #195: Discography
B-76. This Dutch astronomer made important discoveries about the structure of the Milky Way and discovered the globules of interstellar gas and dust that bear his name.
BART BOK
BART BOK
- littlebeast13
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Re: Game #195: Discography
A Non E. Muss wrote:B-76. This Dutch astronomer made important discoveries about the structure of the Milky Way and discovered the globules of interstellar gas and dust that bear his name.
BART BOK
So many weird names in this game. This one might actually take the cake, but I still can't make anything out of it...
Has mrkelley been around lately?
lb13
Thursday comics! Squirrel pictures! The link to my CafePress store! All kinds of fun stuff!!!!
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- franktangredi
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Re: Game #195: Discography
I will offer this advice. Forget the songs for the moment. Try to see what people might be paired together and work the songs in later.
- jarnon
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Re: Game #195: Discography
Now that the two wrong answers have been identified, the others in the Sept. 19 consolidation must all be right…
Game #195: Discography
Identify the 45 songs in List A and the 100 people in List B. Then, match each song to two people, according to a Tangredi, or principle you must discover for yourself. Five songs will be used twice.
LIST A: SONGS
A-1. Rock of Ages – Def Leppard
A-2. Barracuda -- Heart
A-3. Have You Ever Seen the Rain – Creedence Clearwater Revival
A-4. Back to Black – Amy Winehouse
A-5. Good Morning Starshine -- Oliver
A-6. Closer – Nine Inch Nails
A-7. Sweet Emotion -- Aerosmith
A-8. Playground – Another Bad Creation
A-9. Puppy Love – Paul Anka or Donny Osmond
A-10. This Kiss – Faith Hill
A-11. I Like It — Dino
A-12. Mr. Roboto -- Styx
A-13. Stressed Out – Twenty-one Pilots
A-14. Name – Goo Goo Dolls
A-15. Graduation Song – Vitamin C
A-16. Street Dreams — Nas
A-17. Jump (for my Love) – The Pointer Sisters
A-18. Wannabe – Spice Girls
A-19. Sorry – Justin Bieber
A-20. Easy – The Commodores
A-21. Dizzy – Tommy Roe
A-22. Thunder – Imagine Dragons
A-23. Let’s Go – The Cars
A-24. I Could Not Ask for More – Edwin McCain
A-25. Mockingbird — Eminem
A-26. Macho Man – Village People
A-27. Atlanta Lady — Marty Balin
A-28. If I were a Boy -- Beyonce
A-29. Don’t Worry Baby – The Beach Boys
A-30. Ain't it Funny — Jennifer Lopez
A-31. December – Collective Soul
A-32. Everybody Wants to Rule the World – Tears for Fears
A-33. Heartless — Kanye West
A-34. Cold As Ice -- Foreigner
A-35. Nothing Else Matters -- Metallica
A-36. Can’t Help But Wait — Trey Songz
A-37. Don’t Hang Up – The Orlons
A-38. Humble — Kendrick Lamar
A-39. Jamboree — Naughty By Nature
A-40. Selfie – The Chainsmokers
A-41. My Eyes Adored You – Frankie Valli
A-42. Running with the Night – Lionel Richie
A-43. Amish Paradise – Weird Al Yankovic
A-44. I Can’t Get Next To You – The Temptations
A-45. God's Plan — Drake
LIST B: PEOPLE
B-1. Wolfgang A. Mozart
B-2. John F. Kennedy
B-3. Louis Pasteur
B-4. William Makepeace Thackeray
B-5. John D. Rockefeller, Jr.
B-6. Auguste Renoir
B-7. Ryan Lochte
B-8. Russell Crowe
B-9. Joe Hill
B-10. Judith Jamison
B-11. Giuseppe Garibaldi
B-12. Norman Vincent Peale
B-13. Yvonne Braithwaite Burke
B-14. Bryan Ferry
B-15. His discoveries in the field of immunology led him to become the first Belgian to win the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
Jules Bordet
B-16. Superman/Clark Kent
B-17. Edward Gibbon
B-18. He delivered the last line – which was also the title – of a popular 1960s all-star comedy. (No, not that popular 1960s all-star comedy … though he appeared in that one as well.)
Ben Blue
B-19. This Nobel laureate was a key figure in the Trümmerliteratur ("rubble literature") movement that arose in postwar Germany.
Heinrich Boll
B-20. Dave Roberts
B-21. Lincoln Steffens
B-22. Bertrand Russell
B-23. Neil Armstrong
B-24. James Lovell
B-25. This jurist – the first Supreme Court Justice to hire a law clerk – was succeeded on the bench by Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.
Horace Gray
B-26. Xavier Cugat
B-27. Bill Blass
B-28. Harvey Milk
B-29. Frederick William Lanchester
B-30. Agatha Christie
B-31. Jean-Jacques Annaud
B-32. Shannon Miller
B-33. Walker Evans
B-34. Howard Hughes
B-35. Jack Ruby
B-36. John Coltrane
B-37. Boss Tweed
B-38. Max Born
B-39. Although he never made Cardinal – probably through the machinations of Eamon de Valera – this Dublin archbishop was the most influential clergyman in Ireland for more than 30 years.
William Walsh
B-40. Werner Krauss
B-41. Garson Kanin
B-42. Harry Harlow
B-43. Nick Faldo
B-44. Prince Archie Mountbatten-Windsor
B-45. A hero of the Franco-Prussian War, he became known as General Revanche for his extreme nationalism and desire to avenge France’s defeat.
Georges Ernest Boulanger
B-46. This philosopher posited a system of three worlds in which World One was the physical world, World Two was the world of the mind, and World Three was the body of human knowledge.
Karl Popper
B-47. Steve Stevens
B-48. Bea Arthur
B-49. Gregory Pincus
B-50. Charles Dudley Warner
B-51. Fred Shuttlesworth
B-52. Melvin Laird
B-53. Amy Vanderbilt
B-54. Baron Davis
B-55. A member of the Will Eisner Award Hall of Fame, this underground cartoonist is best known for his creation of a hedonistic wizard whose mystical hat covers his entire body down to his legs.
Vaughn Bode
B-56. Jacob Marley
B-57. Corey Haim
B-58. His celebrated clients included an osteopath, a U.S. Army captain, and a football player.
F. Lee Bailey
B-59. Lynn Anderson
B-60. The Nicholas Brothers
B-61. Moscow Mitch McConnell
B-62. Joseph Schumpeter
B-63. Jacques Cousteau
B-64. Gore Vidal
B-65. Billy Smith
B-66. Curtis LeMay
B-67. Alex Grass
B-68. Brian Williams
B-69. Patricia Ireland
B-70. Thomas Keller
B-71. This architect’s work included the triumphal arch in Washington Square Park, the Boston Public Library, and an arena that was demolished in 1925.
Stanford White
B-72. In the 1950s, he co-founded the first experimental theatre company in the United States. (One NY critic, clearly not sympathetic to the avant-garde, famously complained that the theatre “should drop dead.”)
B-73. Mary Shelley
B-74. Though he only served one term as Secretary of State, he was instrumental in getting the U.S. involved in one war and helped nudge the nation on the long road toward another war.
B-75. Blind Melon
B-76. This Dutch astronomer made important discoveries about the structure of the Milky Way and discovered the globules of interstellar gas and dust that bear his name.
Bart Bok
B-77. This boxer, who took his ring name from a fast-firing weapon, held the World Light Heavyweight title for two years in the early 1950s.
Joey Maxim
B-78. Phineas Fogg
B-79. Harriet Lane
B-80. The last words of this war criminal– convicted at Nuremberg for coordinating slave labor for the Third Reich – were, “I die an innocent man, my sentence is unjust. God protect Germany! May it live and one day become great again! God protect my family."
Fritz Sauckel
B-81. This general got his nickname for his role in suppressing a rebellion against the Qing dynasty, but he failed to repeat such success on another continent.
B-82. Minutes after hearing that his firm had won a landmark 1934 Supreme Court ruling, this publisher ordered his typesetters to get to work on the book that was the subject of the suit.
Bennett Cerf
B-83. This playwright won his third Pulitzer Prize for an experimental nine-act play.
Edward Albee? Eugene O'Neill?
B-84. The two films that he made with Bette Davis were, in their own way, every bit as violent as the three films he made with Lee Marvin.
B-85. Robert Plant
B-86. Nebuchadnezzar
B-87. Rollie Fingers
B-88. Claude Shannon
B-89. Though he spent much of his career painting dogs and horses, this Victorian artist also created the lion sculptures in Trafalgar Square.
Edwin Landseer
B-90. Franz Boas
B-91. Dorothea Dix
B-92. Mary Magdalene
B-93. Henry Hudson
B-94. Farrah Fawcett
B-95. Igor Stravinsky
B-96. Emily Dickinson
B-97. Amos Alonzo Stagg
B-98. George W. Bush
B-99. Herbert Spencer
B-100. Alexander Graham Bell
Game #195: Discography
Identify the 45 songs in List A and the 100 people in List B. Then, match each song to two people, according to a Tangredi, or principle you must discover for yourself. Five songs will be used twice.
LIST A: SONGS
A-1. Rock of Ages – Def Leppard
A-2. Barracuda -- Heart
A-3. Have You Ever Seen the Rain – Creedence Clearwater Revival
A-4. Back to Black – Amy Winehouse
A-5. Good Morning Starshine -- Oliver
A-6. Closer – Nine Inch Nails
A-7. Sweet Emotion -- Aerosmith
A-8. Playground – Another Bad Creation
A-9. Puppy Love – Paul Anka or Donny Osmond
A-10. This Kiss – Faith Hill
A-11. I Like It — Dino
A-12. Mr. Roboto -- Styx
A-13. Stressed Out – Twenty-one Pilots
A-14. Name – Goo Goo Dolls
A-15. Graduation Song – Vitamin C
A-16. Street Dreams — Nas
A-17. Jump (for my Love) – The Pointer Sisters
A-18. Wannabe – Spice Girls
A-19. Sorry – Justin Bieber
A-20. Easy – The Commodores
A-21. Dizzy – Tommy Roe
A-22. Thunder – Imagine Dragons
A-23. Let’s Go – The Cars
A-24. I Could Not Ask for More – Edwin McCain
A-25. Mockingbird — Eminem
A-26. Macho Man – Village People
A-27. Atlanta Lady — Marty Balin
A-28. If I were a Boy -- Beyonce
A-29. Don’t Worry Baby – The Beach Boys
A-30. Ain't it Funny — Jennifer Lopez
A-31. December – Collective Soul
A-32. Everybody Wants to Rule the World – Tears for Fears
A-33. Heartless — Kanye West
A-34. Cold As Ice -- Foreigner
A-35. Nothing Else Matters -- Metallica
A-36. Can’t Help But Wait — Trey Songz
A-37. Don’t Hang Up – The Orlons
A-38. Humble — Kendrick Lamar
A-39. Jamboree — Naughty By Nature
A-40. Selfie – The Chainsmokers
A-41. My Eyes Adored You – Frankie Valli
A-42. Running with the Night – Lionel Richie
A-43. Amish Paradise – Weird Al Yankovic
A-44. I Can’t Get Next To You – The Temptations
A-45. God's Plan — Drake
LIST B: PEOPLE
B-1. Wolfgang A. Mozart
B-2. John F. Kennedy
B-3. Louis Pasteur
B-4. William Makepeace Thackeray
B-5. John D. Rockefeller, Jr.
B-6. Auguste Renoir
B-7. Ryan Lochte
B-8. Russell Crowe
B-9. Joe Hill
B-10. Judith Jamison
B-11. Giuseppe Garibaldi
B-12. Norman Vincent Peale
B-13. Yvonne Braithwaite Burke
B-14. Bryan Ferry
B-15. His discoveries in the field of immunology led him to become the first Belgian to win the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
Jules Bordet
B-16. Superman/Clark Kent
B-17. Edward Gibbon
B-18. He delivered the last line – which was also the title – of a popular 1960s all-star comedy. (No, not that popular 1960s all-star comedy … though he appeared in that one as well.)
Ben Blue
B-19. This Nobel laureate was a key figure in the Trümmerliteratur ("rubble literature") movement that arose in postwar Germany.
Heinrich Boll
B-20. Dave Roberts
B-21. Lincoln Steffens
B-22. Bertrand Russell
B-23. Neil Armstrong
B-24. James Lovell
B-25. This jurist – the first Supreme Court Justice to hire a law clerk – was succeeded on the bench by Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.
Horace Gray
B-26. Xavier Cugat
B-27. Bill Blass
B-28. Harvey Milk
B-29. Frederick William Lanchester
B-30. Agatha Christie
B-31. Jean-Jacques Annaud
B-32. Shannon Miller
B-33. Walker Evans
B-34. Howard Hughes
B-35. Jack Ruby
B-36. John Coltrane
B-37. Boss Tweed
B-38. Max Born
B-39. Although he never made Cardinal – probably through the machinations of Eamon de Valera – this Dublin archbishop was the most influential clergyman in Ireland for more than 30 years.
William Walsh
B-40. Werner Krauss
B-41. Garson Kanin
B-42. Harry Harlow
B-43. Nick Faldo
B-44. Prince Archie Mountbatten-Windsor
B-45. A hero of the Franco-Prussian War, he became known as General Revanche for his extreme nationalism and desire to avenge France’s defeat.
Georges Ernest Boulanger
B-46. This philosopher posited a system of three worlds in which World One was the physical world, World Two was the world of the mind, and World Three was the body of human knowledge.
Karl Popper
B-47. Steve Stevens
B-48. Bea Arthur
B-49. Gregory Pincus
B-50. Charles Dudley Warner
B-51. Fred Shuttlesworth
B-52. Melvin Laird
B-53. Amy Vanderbilt
B-54. Baron Davis
B-55. A member of the Will Eisner Award Hall of Fame, this underground cartoonist is best known for his creation of a hedonistic wizard whose mystical hat covers his entire body down to his legs.
Vaughn Bode
B-56. Jacob Marley
B-57. Corey Haim
B-58. His celebrated clients included an osteopath, a U.S. Army captain, and a football player.
F. Lee Bailey
B-59. Lynn Anderson
B-60. The Nicholas Brothers
B-61. Moscow Mitch McConnell
B-62. Joseph Schumpeter
B-63. Jacques Cousteau
B-64. Gore Vidal
B-65. Billy Smith
B-66. Curtis LeMay
B-67. Alex Grass
B-68. Brian Williams
B-69. Patricia Ireland
B-70. Thomas Keller
B-71. This architect’s work included the triumphal arch in Washington Square Park, the Boston Public Library, and an arena that was demolished in 1925.
Stanford White
B-72. In the 1950s, he co-founded the first experimental theatre company in the United States. (One NY critic, clearly not sympathetic to the avant-garde, famously complained that the theatre “should drop dead.”)
B-73. Mary Shelley
B-74. Though he only served one term as Secretary of State, he was instrumental in getting the U.S. involved in one war and helped nudge the nation on the long road toward another war.
B-75. Blind Melon
B-76. This Dutch astronomer made important discoveries about the structure of the Milky Way and discovered the globules of interstellar gas and dust that bear his name.
Bart Bok
B-77. This boxer, who took his ring name from a fast-firing weapon, held the World Light Heavyweight title for two years in the early 1950s.
Joey Maxim
B-78. Phineas Fogg
B-79. Harriet Lane
B-80. The last words of this war criminal– convicted at Nuremberg for coordinating slave labor for the Third Reich – were, “I die an innocent man, my sentence is unjust. God protect Germany! May it live and one day become great again! God protect my family."
Fritz Sauckel
B-81. This general got his nickname for his role in suppressing a rebellion against the Qing dynasty, but he failed to repeat such success on another continent.
B-82. Minutes after hearing that his firm had won a landmark 1934 Supreme Court ruling, this publisher ordered his typesetters to get to work on the book that was the subject of the suit.
Bennett Cerf
B-83. This playwright won his third Pulitzer Prize for an experimental nine-act play.
Edward Albee? Eugene O'Neill?
B-84. The two films that he made with Bette Davis were, in their own way, every bit as violent as the three films he made with Lee Marvin.
B-85. Robert Plant
B-86. Nebuchadnezzar
B-87. Rollie Fingers
B-88. Claude Shannon
B-89. Though he spent much of his career painting dogs and horses, this Victorian artist also created the lion sculptures in Trafalgar Square.
Edwin Landseer
B-90. Franz Boas
B-91. Dorothea Dix
B-92. Mary Magdalene
B-93. Henry Hudson
B-94. Farrah Fawcett
B-95. Igor Stravinsky
B-96. Emily Dickinson
B-97. Amos Alonzo Stagg
B-98. George W. Bush
B-99. Herbert Spencer
B-100. Alexander Graham Bell
Слава Україні!
עם ישראל חי
עם ישראל חי
- franktangredi
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- Joined: Tue Feb 12, 2008 4:34 pm
Re: Game #195: Discography
I hate to say this ... but one name that was added since the last consolidation is wrong. (It wasn't suggested as a definite anyway.) Let's not worry about that right now.
- kroxquo
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Re: Game #195: Discography
Frank, I can't speak for anyone but myself, but I've been up, down, and across these answers and I am coming up with nothing.
You live and learn. Or at least you live. - Douglas Adams
- mellytu74
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Re: Game #195: Discography
Ditto.kroxquo wrote:Frank, I can't speak for anyone but myself, but I've been up, down, and across these answers and I am coming up with nothing.
I suspect it's one of those things that, once we FIND it, we will do fairly well.
But, until then, I have the same dilemma as Krox. And I was looking for something for Garibaldi...
- jarnon
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Re: Game #195: Discography
I tried to find matches but don't see any pattern.franktangredi wrote:I will offer this advice. Forget the songs for the moment. Try to see what people might be paired together and work the songs in later.
Don’t Hang Up / Clark Kent / Alexander Graham Bell
God's Plan / Nebuchadnezzar / Mary Magdalene
Good Morning Starshine / Neil Armstrong / James Lovell
Closer / Rollie Fingers / Ben Blue
Слава Україні!
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- franktangredi
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Re: Game #195: Discography
Would you like me to give you one correct pairing and let you work it out that way?
- littlebeast13
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Re: Game #195: Discography
franktangredi wrote:Would you like me to give you one correct pairing and let you work it out that way?
I'll agree to that.
lb13
Thursday comics! Squirrel pictures! The link to my CafePress store! All kinds of fun stuff!!!!
Visit my Evil Squirrel blog here: http://evilsquirrelsnest.com
Visit my Evil Squirrel blog here: http://evilsquirrelsnest.com
- franktangredi
- Posts: 6519
- Joined: Tue Feb 12, 2008 4:34 pm
Re: Game #195: Discography
Okay. See if you can figure out why B-11 goes with B-86. Or why B-19 goes with B-67.littlebeast13 wrote:franktangredi wrote:Would you like me to give you one correct pairing and let you work it out that way?
I'll agree to that.
lb13
- littlebeast13
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Re: Game #195: Discography
franktangredi wrote:Okay. See if you can figure out why B-11 goes with B-86. Or why B-19 goes with B-67.
B-11. Giuseppe Garibaldi
B-86. Nebuchadnezzar
B-19. Heinrich Boll
B-67. Alex Grass
Anyone? I suspect there's some kind of word/letter play here since the names in the latter match in particular are not noteworthy... but I'm not seeing it.
Thursday comics! Squirrel pictures! The link to my CafePress store! All kinds of fun stuff!!!!
Visit my Evil Squirrel blog here: http://evilsquirrelsnest.com
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- mrkelley23
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Re: Game #195: Discography
Wow. Trying to finalize my dissertation proposal, advocating for teachers in a very messy contract negotiation, and just trying to live life has kept me mostly away.
I still don't have a surefire connection, but I might be able to jar some things loose.
Heinrich Boll was a frenemy and contemporary of Gunter Grass, which would match up well with Alex Grass, I guess. Gunter's only work familiar to me is The Tin Drum. So I don't really see any connection to any of the songs or artists.
Nebuchadnezzar is the name of an opera by Giuseppe Verdi, but I don't see any connection to Aida, or Rigoletto, or La Traviata in the song list.
I thought maybe the "missing name" might be anagrammed in the song list somewhere, but I don't see any anagram of Gunter or Verdi there.
I'll keep thinking.
I still don't have a surefire connection, but I might be able to jar some things loose.
Heinrich Boll was a frenemy and contemporary of Gunter Grass, which would match up well with Alex Grass, I guess. Gunter's only work familiar to me is The Tin Drum. So I don't really see any connection to any of the songs or artists.
Nebuchadnezzar is the name of an opera by Giuseppe Verdi, but I don't see any connection to Aida, or Rigoletto, or La Traviata in the song list.
I thought maybe the "missing name" might be anagrammed in the song list somewhere, but I don't see any anagram of Gunter or Verdi there.
I'll keep thinking.
For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled. -- Richard Feynman
- jarnon
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Re: Game #195: Discography
Along these lines, Phineas Fogg is a creation of Jules Verne (Jules Bordet). Mozart could go with Franz Liszt (Franz Boas). Max Born matches Wolfgang Pauli (Wolfgang Mozart). Jack Ruby killed Lee Oswald (F. Lee Bailey). John D. Rockefeller, Jr. goes with Cornelius Vanderbilt (Amy Vanderbilt). Farrah Fawcett was married to Lee Majors (F. Lee Bailey). George W. Bush ran against Al Gore (Gore Vidal).
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- mrkelley23
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Re: Game #195: Discography
B-100 Alexander Graham Bell competed with B-25 (Horace) Elisha Gray for the title of inventor of the telephone
B-97 Amos Alonzo Stagg and B-50 (Charles Dudley) Pop Warner were legendary college football coaches
There's almost certainly something there, but I haven't found a way to connect it to the songs/artists yet.
B-97 Amos Alonzo Stagg and B-50 (Charles Dudley) Pop Warner were legendary college football coaches
There's almost certainly something there, but I haven't found a way to connect it to the songs/artists yet.
For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled. -- Richard Feynman
- franktangredi
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Re: Game #195: Discography
You're there. You're almost there.
- mrkelley23
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Re: Game #195: Discography
Verdi = Drive, a song by The Cars
Pop = OPP, a song by Naughty by Nature
Gunter = Urgent, a song by Foreigner
Verne = Never, a song by Heart
Sorry, I don't have time to write this up better right now. I'll try to come back and fix it later. But that's it.
Pop = OPP, a song by Naughty by Nature
Gunter = Urgent, a song by Foreigner
Verne = Never, a song by Heart
Sorry, I don't have time to write this up better right now. I'll try to come back and fix it later. But that's it.
For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled. -- Richard Feynman
- kroxquo
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Re: Game #195: Discography
And this possibly goes with A-37 DON'T HANG UP?mrkelley23 wrote:B-100 Alexander Graham Bell competed with B-25 (Horace) Elisha Gray for the title of inventor of the telephone
You live and learn. Or at least you live. - Douglas Adams