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Edward Cahill plays in the Teatro Romano in Ventimiglia, Italian Riviera, in May 1947

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Lt. to Rt. the famous surgeon Dr. Serge Voronoff, Edward Cahill the Australian pianist, the Baron Leonino da Zara, the former Italian air ace at the   Teatro Romano Ventimiglia (Bordighera), Italian Riviera 1947 The diminutive Edward Cahill at the Teatro Romano Ventimiglia (Bordighera) Italian Riviera in 1947 The remains of the Teatro Romano Ventimiglia Italian Riviera in the summer of 2011 For those of you following some of my occasional posts concerning progress on my 'book in progress' on my great-uncle, the brilliant but forgotten Australian pianist Edward Cahill, you might like to have a look at this small piece of 16mm film which I have had recently transferred to DVD. You can download and view it in Windows Media Player. The film clip is silent except for a brief burst of Liszt’s La Campanella . The film is in two brief sections which are rather similar. It shows Edward playing at the Teatro Romano in Ven...

Warsaw the Phoenix - The Maria Skłodowska-Curie Bridge (Most Marii Skłodowskiej-Curie, formerly North Bridge)

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                         Just to say I was one of the very first cars to cross the new Maria Skłodowska-Curie Bridge ( Most Marii Skłodowskiej-Curie , formerly North Bridge) on Sunday March 25th 2012 when it first opened to motor vehicles. This engineering project was incredibly complex (one of the largest in the EU and the most complex intersection design in Warsaw). Despite all the dramas of naming (in true Polish style!) everyone involved is to be congratulated. Full detailed information and technical links at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maria_Sk%C5%82odowska-Curie_Bridge,_Warsaw The car is my concours 1949 MG TC which I have affectionately tended at ruinous expense, intense frustration but much joy for many years now. Properly registered as a classic car in Poland but still on 'proper' English plates as I pr...

Poland Pictured

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The Napoleonic Fortress of Modlin at the confluence of the Vistula and Narew rivers close to Warsaw Officers exchanging vital tactical intelligence at a re-enactment of the Napoleonic Battle of Raszyn 1809 At the re-enactment of the Napoleonic Battle of Pultusk 1806 Officers at leisure before the Napoleonic Battle of Pultusk 1806 Some of my other photographs of the country, unfortunately not included in my book on Poland  A Country in the Moon are available on my website at: http://www.michael-moran.net/pages/poland/photos.htm [For those of you who are interested in such matters, they are mostly non-digital photographs I shot with my non-electronic Nikon F2 with the old Nikon lenses. These days I use a digital Leica more often than the F2. However I feel the 'painterly' quality of landscape and subject cannot be convincingly or adequately created through the Adobe or Capture One processing of digital images....

16th. Ludwig van Beethoven Easter Festival Warsaw 25 March - 6 April 2012

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Unfortunately I have little time to attend all the concerts of this festival (my own writing and research takes up so much time) but at least two of the pianists interested me greatly. 25 March The splendid miltitaristic and certainly festive performance of   Wellington’s Victory, Op. 91 appropriately opened the Festival followed by what must be considered a unique assemblage of talent. The Triple Concerto in C major, Op. 56 was performed with three winners of the recent Tchaikovsky Competion in Moscow on their various instruments. Daniil Trifonov – piano Sergey Dogadin – violin Narek Hakhnazaryan – cello The chamber music section of the competition meant these three must have already had a n immense command of ensemble playing and for me it was remarkable performance of this admittedly light, charming work. Daniil Trifonov listened carefully to the other solists and played in his usual intensely sensitive and musical manner. O...

Eccentric Club Dinner at the Savile Club, 69 Brook Street, Mayfair on the evening of 21 March 2012 in the presence of H.R.H. the Prince Philip

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Pretentious moi ? Probably but it's fun in its own way. One only lives once and the standards one was brought up with should be maintained as one ages. I cling desperately to the coat-tails of the 'inequality onslaught' as my once comfortable income is unpleasantly reduced by the recession and the financial chaos in Europe. The oligarchs rise inexorably in a triumph of mediocrity. I also fight a thankless task against the frightful leveling of 'political correctness'. This club and the art of individualist and fearless conversation it maintains helps somewhat to foster a normal sense of human proportion, humour and morality.  Club motto:      Nil Nisi Bonum - Nothing But Good Click on pictures to enlarge I made a special trip to London from Warsaw for this entertaining event and was so pleased I did so. The venue was the Savile Club at 69 Brook Street London W.1 once owned by Viscountess Harcourt. The club occupies one of the greatest original...