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Post by theblackferret on Dec 1, 2014 8:59:24 GMT
Hi folks
Tomorrow, I’ll be starting the Christmas and New Year¹ Quiz here. I did think about calling it the Saturnalia Quiz. Unfortunately whilst mistletoe can be found down here, woad, druids and mead are not so plentiful!
The usual daily quiz will be taking a rest for ten days, from tomorrow, and therefore tomorrow will be the first of ten days with five questions each and bonus questions. Stunningly logical so far, especially as all questions will be railway-linked; although, as somebody once said "It's a daily quiz, Jim, but not as we know it".
All the questions will go up in turn on this one thread, so it’s easier for you to do the quiz. No answers will go up until December 14th, when I’ll put the whole lot up.
Can you please not post any answers on this thread or elsewhere? You should pm me and me only (so our regular quiz team can play, too, please) with your answers. You can pm answers any time of day, every day, any day, or save them all and pm all together at the end (but before 14 December, please!).
Much of it will have come from my personal archive ( ), but you will find every answer on the ‘net, so this way will also give you a chance to burn search engines to a crisp at your convenience. And I’ve taken the answers from there, not my personal recollection, so nobody gets into a wild goose chase at my behest!
If you want to change your mind on any earlier entry, just state that in any later pm to me. This is not University Challenge, so I don’t have to accept your first answer! I will use the first correct answer principle to determine who wins any day's quiz in the event of a tie, and even the whole thing overall.
If you want to start a separate thread about suitable places to exile me (Mill Hill East?), fine, but let’s make it easy for mods and leave this thread to me.
Thanks & hope you enjoy it!
theblackferret
¹ =called the Christmas & New Year quiz as it will finish before your advent calenders or 2015, and no questions nor answers will contain the words Christmas or New Year.
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Post by theblackferret on Dec 2, 2014 8:54:52 GMT
DAY ONE
Name the five songs below from the part-lyrics quoted & the artist(s) who recorded them-which version requested will always be IN CAPITALS. Then answer the bonus questions.
1. I’m sittin’ in the railway station, got a ticket for my destination 1966 ORIGINAL
2. I’ll be loaded like a freight train, flyin’ like an aeroplane 1987 ORIGINAL
3. And at dead of night the whistle blows, and people hear she’s running still 1975 ORIGINAL
4. Train I ride 16 coaches long, well that long black train, got my baby and gone 1953 US ORIGINAL
5. We’ll have one more night together, til the morning brings my train 1966 ORIGINAL
BONUS ROUND
1.Which station commemorates the writing of song 1 with a plaque?
2.Name the only act to make the UK top 30 chart with a recording of song 4.
Don't forget, folks!
Can you please not post any answers on this thread or elsewhere? You should pm me and me only (so our regular quiz team can play, too, please) with your answers. You can pm answers any time of day, every day, any day, or save them all and pm all together at the end (but before 14 December, please!).
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Post by phillw48 on Dec 2, 2014 12:20:08 GMT
1) Is Homeward bound by Simon & Garfunkel.
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Post by arun on Dec 2, 2014 12:34:04 GMT
4 is Mystery Train by Junior Parker - Elvis did it a couple of years later
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rincew1nd
Administrator
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Post by rincew1nd on Dec 2, 2014 13:22:05 GMT
theblackferret requested above that answers be sent by PM, I've since enlarged the text. I've just removed two answers from this thread, I'll return them when the quiz closes.
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Post by norbitonflyer on Dec 2, 2014 13:45:04 GMT
Can I suggest you lock the thread to prevent further such accidents?
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rincew1nd
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Post by rincew1nd on Dec 2, 2014 15:45:02 GMT
You can suggest it, indeed that's what the original intended modus operandi was. Once we'd thought it through though we realised that this was a non-starter and it would be easier to simply answer by PM.
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Post by theblackferret on Dec 2, 2014 23:51:59 GMT
Greetings once more to you all.
I've heard those cogs turning all day long, so let's have some more eh?
Before we do, here's a picture of a Tube train, for anyone getting withdrawal symptoms:
So you now can safely assume that Lt. Pigeon won't be in the quiz anywhere today or ever!
DAY TWO
Name the five songs below from the part-lyrics quoted & the artist(s) who recorded them-which version requested will always be IN CAPITALS. Then answer the bonus questions.
1. I hear the train a-coming, it’s rolling round the bend 1956 ORIGINAL
2. The distant echo of faraway voices boarding faraway trains 1978 ORIGINAL
3. Then I broke loose, you weren’t around So I raised banks and trains until I tracked you down 1984 ORIGINAL
4. Oh the engineers used to see him sitting in the shade, Strumming with the rhythm that the drivers made 1958 ORIGINAL
5. You can’t jump a jet plane, like you can a freight train, so I’d best be on my way in 1966 VERSION BY THE ACTUAL SONGWRITER.
BONUS ROUND
1. Artists 3’s first album contained which single with a promotional video shot on board a preserved railway?
2. Song 5’s been recorded by a lot of people-name the LP’s on which Bob Dylan, Elvis Presley & Jerry Lee Lewis released their versions.
Don't forget, folks!
Can you please not post any answers on this thread or elsewhere? You should pm me and me only (so our regular quiz team can play, too, please) with your answers. You can pm (theblackferret) answers any time of day, every day, any day, or save them all and pm all together at the end (but before 14 December, please!).
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rincew1nd
Administrator
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Posts: 10,235
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Post by rincew1nd on Dec 3, 2014 0:19:34 GMT
...here's a picture of a Tube train, for anyone getting withdrawal symptoms: Point of order! That's not a "tube" train, looks like a C Stock to me. Do I get a point?
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Post by theblackferret on Dec 3, 2014 10:41:47 GMT
...here's a picture of a Tube train, for anyone getting withdrawal symptoms: Point of order! That's not a "tube" train, looks like a C Stock to me. Do I get a point? No, you get TWO, not because of your Global Moderator status, but because you politely didn't cast nasturtiums at the pigeon for leaving that graffito tag on the sliding doors!
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Post by John Tuthill on Dec 3, 2014 11:15:36 GMT
Point of order! That's not a "tube" train, looks like a C Stock to me. Do I get a point? No, you get TWO, not because of your Global Moderator status, but because you politely didn't cast nasturtiums at the pigeon for leaving that graffito tag on the sliding doors! I thought they'd designed the seat moquette! Or was that Jackson Pollock?
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Post by theblackferret on Dec 3, 2014 23:35:53 GMT
Well, it's day three-let the fun rumble on, I say. But not before I give you not one but three pics. This man may or may not be familiar to you, but his work here at Regent's Park: and here: sure will be-that was Leslie Green, the famous architect and faience tiling fan. Unfortunately, even that 'tache isn't enough to get him into the quiz, because he didn't write songs as well, but we know a few that did....... DAY THREE Name the five songs below from the part-lyrics quoted & the artist(s) who recorded them-which version requested will always be IN CAPITALS. Then answer the bonus questions. 1. I really wanna be with you, Let the music play on down the line tonight 1979 ORIGINAL
2. Oh, you railway station, oh, you Pullman train 1961 UK ARTISTS 3. If you miss the one, you’ll never get another one 1957 ORIGINAL
4. Yes and here, right here, between the moonlight and the lane, Between the tunnel and the train 1970 ORIGINAL 5. I’m gonna cry cry cry til the end of the line 1984 UK ARTISTS
BONUS ROUND 1.In which year was song 2 originally written?
2.Which 1958 classic song did the writer of song 5 also co-compose, and what is his real name? Don't forget, folks!
Can you please not post any answers on this thread or elsewhere? You should pm me and me only (so our regular quiz team can play, too, please) with your answers. You can pm answers any time of day, every day, any day, or save them all and pm all together at the end (but before 14 December, please!).
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Post by theblackferret on Dec 4, 2014 23:21:06 GMT
On to day four, but before that, today's whacky image, French Impressionist painter Camille pi$$arro, who famously painted Lordship Lane on the old Crystal Palace High Level branch in 1872. One of the famous post-war plans was to build a new Tube line to join with the Crystal Palace branch at Lordship Lane and terminate at Crystal Palace, or project the Met from New Cross to the branch. So, no chance of ZZ Top sneaking into this quiz, because that's one helluva beard Camille had, even if he didn't devise the Tube scheme! DAY FOUR Name the five songs below from the part-lyrics quoted & the artist(s) who recorded them-which version requested will always be IN CAPITALS. Then answer the bonus questions. 1. You leave the Pennsylvania station ‘bout a quarter to four, Read a magazine, and then you’re in Baltimore 1941 ORIGINAL
2. On a railway train to anywhere, something happened finally 1969 ORIGINAL 3. Now it’s a mighty long way down the dusty trail And the sun burns hot on the cold steel rails 1973 ORIGINAL
4. Tell you more lies than cross ties on the railroad, or stars in the sky 1951 US GROUP 5. Well, I got one foot on the platform, the other foot on the train, I’m goin’ back to New Orleans to wear that ball and chain 1964 UK GROUP
BONUS ROUND 1.What record in US chart history did the group who cut song 4 set earlier in 1951-it has still not been surpassed?
2.Name the Detroit band who revived song 5 in 1970 & put it in both the UK & US top tens? Don't forget, folks!
Can you please not post any answers on this thread or elsewhere? You should pm me and me only (so our regular quiz team can play, too, please) with your answers. You can pm answers any time of day, every day, any day, or save them all and pm all together at the end (but before 14 December, please!).
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Post by theblackferret on Dec 5, 2014 23:23:09 GMT
And today's brief interlude, one Victorian PM: and one Victorian social reformer: William Ewart Gladstone made his last train journey on the Underground in 1898-his coffin being transported to Westminster station overnight, probably on an LNWR train changing onto (Metropolitan) District rails at Willesden Junction. Bit easier for Dr Thomas Barnardo in 1911-his last journey took his coffin on the Central Line directly from Liverpool Street, after laying in state in the East End for five days, to Barkingside(which had opened two years before), which was where he had lived and where he was buried. Unfortunately, both these men were too busy either philantropising or reforming to write many songs, let alone ones about trains. However..... DAY FIVE Name the five songs below from the part-lyrics quoted & the artist(s) who recorded them-which version requested will always be IN CAPITALS. Then answer the bonus questions. 1. Engineer blows the whistle loud and long, can’t stop the train, gotta let it roll on 1971 UK B-SIDE LIVE RECORDING IN LEEDS
2. You know, I thought it was a Streamline, but it was a B& O 1966 ORIGINAL 3. Oh how lonely I have been, but when that Santa Fe pulls in 1957 ORIGINAL
4. And the steel rails are cold and hard For the miles that they go down 1973 ORIGINAL 5. Going to Madrid from Lisbon, This train is a flying machine 1981 ORIGINAL
BONUS ROUND 1.Who is the lead guitarist on song 2?
2.In which 1957 film does song 3 feature? Don't forget, folks!
Can you please not post any answers on this thread or elsewhere? You should pm me and me only (so our regular quiz team can play, too, please) with your answers. You can pm answers any time of day, every day, any day, or save them all and pm all together at the end (but before 14 December, please!).
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Post by norbitonflyer on Dec 6, 2014 11:07:06 GMT
Dr Thomas Barnardo in 1911-his last journey took his coffin on the Central Line directly from Liverpool Street ... to Barkingside Do I get a bonus point for pointing at that it would have been the Great Eastern Railway (via Ilford) in 1911? At that time, the Central Line's eastern terminus was still at Bank - it didn't even reach Liverpool Street until the following year
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Post by theblackferret on Dec 6, 2014 11:26:49 GMT
Dr Thomas Barnardo in 1911-his last journey took his coffin on the Central Line directly from Liverpool Street ... to Barkingside Do I get a bonus point for pointing at that it would have been the Great Eastern Railway (via Ilford) in 1911? At that time, the Central Line's eastern terminus was still at Bank - it didn't even reach Liverpool Street until the following year I wondered why Gladstone looked so ferocious-thought it was the strain of picking up all those poor fallen women. Now I know! So the answer must be yes!
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Post by norbitonflyer on Dec 6, 2014 12:28:12 GMT
William Ewart Gladstone made his last train journey on the Underground in 1898-his coffin being transported to Westminster station overnight, probably on an LNWR train changing onto (Metropolitan) District rails at Willesden Junction. The connection between the LNWR and District was at Addison Road (now Olympia), not at Willesden Junction. Indeed the LNWR had running powers to Earls Court and it was they (and later the LMS) who operated the Willesden-Earls Court service until 1940 (To save everyone else looking it up, Gladstone died at Hawarden, just over the Welsh border from Chester).
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Post by theblackferret on Dec 6, 2014 15:50:14 GMT
William Ewart Gladstone made his last train journey on the Underground in 1898-his coffin being transported to Westminster station overnight, probably on an LNWR train changing onto (Metropolitan) District rails at Willesden Junction. The connection between the LNWR and District was at Addison Road (now Olympia), not at Willesden Junction. Indeed the LNWR had running powers to Earls Court and it was they (and later the LMS) who operated the Willesden-Earls Court service until 1940 (To save everyone else looking it up, Gladstone died at Hawarden, just over the Welsh border from Chester). In normal circumstances, correct. But these weren't. There is a significant body of evidence that the LNWR locomotive was changed to an LBSCR one and that this took place at Willesden Junction, the Brighton loco then taking WEG & co on to Westminster, to use the subway/walkway connection to the Houses of Parliament. I suspect the MDR traffic superintendent issued a notice to all staff telling them at what time after the loco change the funeral train was due to be passing through their station etc and that any goods trains were to be held in the sidings for 15 minutes either side of that time. Normal arrangements would have been stood on their head in the first place by the presence of the Brighton loco.
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Post by norbitonflyer on Dec 6, 2014 17:47:45 GMT
connection between the LNWR and District was at Addison Road In normal circumstances, correct. But these weren't. the LNWR locomotive was changed to an LBSCR one and that this took place at Willesden Junction. I don't doubt it, but the OP said it switched to MDR rails at Willesden. If anyone is wondering why an the LBSCR loco was chosen, it was presumably because it was this one
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Post by theblackferret on Dec 6, 2014 23:17:30 GMT
And, even more Victorian facial hair today: Well, he didn't write too many rockin' songs, and he did time in the Pen, literally, because he was financially once as bent as a nine-bob note. But, when he moved over here and bought up the CCEHR,BSWR, DR and GNBPR to form UERL, he laid the foundations of the Tube as we know it. So, Charles Tyson Yerkes, even if the 'tache ain't quite enough to get you in the quiz, we thank you for the Bakerloo, Piccadilly and most of the Northern Line.......... DAY SIX Name the five songs below from the part-lyrics quoted & the artist(s) who recorded them-which version requested will always be IN CAPITALS. Then answer the bonus questions. 1. Well I might take a train, I might take a plane, but if I have to walk, I’m gonna get there just the same 1959 US #1 VERSION
2. Platform ticket, restless diesels, goodbye windows; I walked into such a sad time at the station 1968 ORGINAL 3. When the train it left the station, there was two lights on behind 1937 US ORIGINAL
4. The old home town looks the same, as I step down from the train 1966 UK CHRISTMAS NUMBER 1 VERSION 5. She packed her bags, left me behind, she bought a ticket on the Central Line 1984 ORIGINAL
BONUS ROUND 1.Under what alternative title was song 1 originally recorded in 1952, and by whom?
2.The writer of song 3 also wrote and recorded artists 2’s perennial live finale number-which was? Don't forget, folks!
Can you please not post any answers on this thread or elsewhere? You should pm me and me only (so our regular quiz team can play, too, please) with your answers. You can pm answers any time of day, every day, any day, or save them all and pm all together at the end (but before 14 December, please!).
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Chris M
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Post by Chris M on Dec 7, 2014 1:10:55 GMT
I'm thinking there might be scope for a quiz to identify notable people in the history of London Underground just by their facial hair
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Post by theblackferret on Dec 7, 2014 12:02:17 GMT
I'm thinking there might be scope for a quiz to identify notable people in the history of London Underground just by their facial hair And, seeing that, you can't help but ask what might have happened if Prince Albert hadn't died early. Considering his level of input into The Great Exhibition, you just know there'd have been about twice the number of lines we have now. Vorsprung Durch Technik of the facial hair, too: I somehow suspect Paxton, Fowler & Co would have forced to burn the midnight oil with him most weeks on the quill-pen equivalent of RIPAS.
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Post by theblackferret on Dec 7, 2014 23:12:31 GMT
Well, as we are now on day seen, a rest from facial hair, so here is an England football manager in a previous job as West Ham Utd manager: and here is a by then ex-England footballer in a later guise as a West Ham player,celebrating scoring twice on his debut for the Hammersin 1970 (signed by the above, of course): The Tube connection; Ron Greenwood took the FA Cup on a tube ride after West Ham won it in 1964 rather than go to the after-match knees-up & then took it off later that year to a West End cinema, where he & the trophy were guests of honour at the showing of the film, again by Tube: Jimmy Greaves' Dad was a District Line guard when Greavesy was born in 1940, and promoted to a Central Line driver in 1950. Both achieved enough as non-songwriters to be guests of honour and no more at the following rock n roll fest.................... DAY SEVEN Name the five songs below from the part-lyrics quoted & the artist(s) who recorded them-which version requested will always be IN CAPITALS. Then answer the bonus questions. 1. And we are leaving on that train, and we will roam this land, where we All will be free 1966 JAMAICAN ORIGINAL
2. Oh, how the passengers shrieked with pain, they go to Satan to stop that train 1956 US B-SIDE 3. My baby takes the morning train 1981 ORIGINAL
4. Old Charlie stole the handle, and the train it won’t stop going, no way to slow down 1971 ORIGINAL 5. That big eight wheeler a rollin' down the track Means your true lovin' daddy ain't comin' back 1950 US ORIGINAL
BONUS ROUND 1.Which act recorded song 1 with the original artist in 1994 and which other act recorded it alone in 1998?
2.Who released song 5 on a 1965 live EP? Don't forget, folks!
Can you please not post any answers on this thread or elsewhere? You should pm me and me only (so our regular quiz team can play, too, please) with your answers. You can pm answers any time of day, every day, any day, or save them all and pm all together at the end (but before 14 December, please!). BIG NEWS!
The closing date has now been extended to Midnight GMT on the 14th December, not the 13th, thus giving you 3 whole days not a mere two to bombard me with answers.
Seems only fair, as that gives you a long weekend, especially those of you on the social scene on Saturday, to tie it all up.
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Post by theblackferret on Dec 8, 2014 23:20:18 GMT
For Day Eight, a sentimental return, briefly, to Victorian, or Edwardian facial hair: and then 1930's short back and sides: Today's tube connection-H Gordon Selfridge (top) unsuccessfully tried to persuade the Central Line to change the name of Bond Street to Selfridge's. Herbert Chapman (bottom), manager of London's top football team, had rather more luck with LT, and, in 1932, Gillespie Road on the Piccadilly Line changed it's name to Arsenal(Highbury Hill). As you might assume from the photos, neither had much time in their busy lives for the composition of musical frippery involving trains, but we have others who did............... DAY EIGHT Name the five songs below from the part-lyrics quoted & the artist(s) who recorded them-which version requested will always be IN CAPITALS. Then answer the bonus questions. 1. His boiler it was leaking, and its drivers on the bum And his engine and its’ bearings, they were all out of plumb 1955 US RECORDING, WITH TITLE VARIATION
2. Third boxcar, midnight train, destination-Bangor,Maine 1965 ORIGINAL 3. Just a small town girl, livin’ in a lonely world, She took the midnight train goin’ anywhere 1981 ORIGINAL
4. For they looked in the future and what did they see They saw an iron road runnin’ from sea to the sea 1967 ORIGINAL 5. Perfumed by a Nepal night, the express gets you there 1976 ORIGINAL
BONUS ROUND 1.Where was the boy, the girl in song 3 is destined to meet later in the song, born and raised??
2.Which album was song 5 on? Don't forget, folks!
Can you please not post any answers on this thread or elsewhere? You should pm me and me only (so our regular quiz team can play, too, please) with your answers. You can pm answers any time of day, every day, any day, or save them all and pm all together at the end (but before midnight on 14 December, please!).
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Post by theblackferret on Dec 9, 2014 23:12:47 GMT
Well, Day Nine, meaning only one more day after this, so, first off, another Victorian social reformer and facial hair specialist: Together with an aristocratic-looking visionary doing a more than passable imitation of Bertie Wooster: However, hats off to the Solicitor to the City in 1840's London, Charles Pearson. He might be pondering how to fill in his pools coupon in the photo, but he it was who was the consistent driving force in forcing the City authorities to accept the idea of a railway under London-shame he died four months before the very first section opened in 1863. And tip those chapeaus as well, to Sir Patrick Abercrombie. His plans, published in 1943/4, for the future Greater London, were responsible for the mass of post-war new Tube line proposals and therefore he was ultimately the lead honcho in creating the Victoria and Jubilee Lines. Sure, he also wanted to demolish all the railway bridges into Central London once all the new Tubes had tunnelled under the Thames, but that was a logical enough development of his plan, as all the trains that had used them were now going to be underground. Well, after that heart-felt tribute, let's get quizzin' n ' rockin': DAY NINE Name the five songs below from the part-lyrics quoted & the artist(s) who recorded them-which version requested will always be IN CAPITALS. Then answer the bonus questions. 1. When I was a boy in the days of the train, I’d sit by the tracks on a long summer day 1966 ORIGINAL
2. You’d been to the station to meet every train, and you came home without Lili Marlene 1970 ORIGINAL 3. And all the trains that go through the tollgate, why, they gotta pay the man some money 1955 UK ARTIST
4. Well you can’t say yes and you can’t say no, Just be right there when the whistle blows 1972 ORIGINAL 5. I caught a train, I met a dame: She was a hepster, and a real gone dame 1956 US CLASSIC VERSION
BONUS ROUND 1.The artist who wrote/recorded song 2 has had books published,eg The Spice-Box of Earth, Flowers for Hitler, The Favorite Game & Let us Compare Mythologies-which of these is odd one out and why?
2.Which guitar virtuoso recorded song 5 with 3 different group names-and what were the group names? Don't forget, folks!
Can you please not post any answers on this thread or elsewhere? You should pm me and me only (so our regular quiz team can play, too, please) with your answers. You can pm answers any time of day, every day, any day, or save them all and pm all together at the end (but before midnight on 14 December, please!).
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Post by theblackferret on Dec 10, 2014 23:17:17 GMT
Boo-hoo! The last day; still, as we'll soon be on to pm's, we might as well go out with a bang & our PM's fave vid: which was of course famously filmed in its' entirety at Aldywch station. And, so, one last chance to show you not only knew how to boogie, but had one ear open to the lyrics, too.............. DAY TEN
Name the five songs below from the part-lyrics quoted & the artist(s) who recorded them-which version requested will always be IN CAPITALS. Then answer the bonus questions.
1. Watch them run down to Platform 1, and the 8:30 train to 1967 ORIGINAL UK #2
2. Goodbye pretty mama, Lord, get yourself a money man You take that midnight train to Memphis 1979 ORIGINAL
3. Don’t the brakeman look good, Mama, flagging down the Double E 1965 ORIGINAL
4. Tell me how many coaches long, Tell me when did the whistle blow 1990 ORIGINAL:B-SIDE
5. I don’t know what train he’s on, won’t you tell me where he’s gone? 1957 UK ACT
BONUS ROUND
1.Which other two songs also written by artist 1 in 1967 were hits later that year for which two other acts?
2.Of what single was song 4 the B-side?
Don't forget, folks!
Can you please not post any answers on this thread or elsewhere? You should pm me and me only (so our regular quiz team can play, too, please) with your answers. You can pm answers any time of day, every day, any day, or save them all and pm all together at the end (but before midnight on 14 December, please!).
And that is it-après moi, le deluge (of answers)!
And finally,
THANKS-to the Quiz team for letting me do it; it's been brilliant for me putting it together & getting it out to you & -to you for all the hits on the thread & interest in it! I hope you've enjoyed it as much!!
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Post by theblackferret on Dec 13, 2014 21:58:59 GMT
Well, my friends, whether you were there at the social or not, here's an appropriate song:
Apposite lyrics, too:
Don't stop thinking about tomorrow Don't stop, it'll soon be here It'll be better than before Yesterday's gone, yesterday's gone
Because, of course, tomorrow's the last day for receiving your answers, so I thought I'd better pick something off one of the most popular vinyl albums ever just to remind you.
Not that I'm expecting enough replies to surpass Rumour's 40 million plus sales, mind, but I never know with you lot!
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rincew1nd
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Post by rincew1nd on Dec 15, 2014 0:56:28 GMT
A post each from phillw48 and arun have been returned to this thread as guesses are now open.
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