• QFTCIMM24 Game 2, Rounds 2-3: intangible heritage, musician lit

    From Mark Brader@21:1/5 to All on Sat Feb 24 21:54:57 2024
    These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2024-02-05,
    and should be interpreted accordingly.

    On each question you may give up to two answers, but if you give
    both a right answer and a wrong answer, there is a small penalty.
    Please post all your answers in a single followup to the newsgroup,
    based only on your own knowledge. (In your answer posting, quote
    the questions and place your answer below each one.) I will reveal
    the correct answers in about 3 days.

    All questions were written by members of the Misplaced Modifiers
    and are used here by permission, but have been reformatted and may
    have been retyped and/or edited by me. The posting and tabulation
    of current-events questions is independent of the concurrent posting
    of other rounds. For further information please see my 2023-05-24
    companion posting on "Questions from the Canadian Inquisition
    (QFTCI*)".


    * Game 2, Round 2 - Geography - UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage

    We're all familiar with UNESCO's World Heritage Sites, but UNESCO
    also has a registry of cultural activities that exemplify a
    national culture and form a part of world heritage -- everything
    from loincloth weaving in C�te d'Ivoire to opera training in Italy.

    In each case we'll give the intangible, and you tell what *country*
    that has been granted the designation.

    1. Kirkpinar Oil Wrestling Festival: a tradition in this country
    since 1360.

    2. Capoeira dance: a mixed style of fighting and dancing.

    3. Gamelan: a traditional percussion orchestra using hand-forged
    metal gongs, cymbals, and other percussives.

    4. Castells: these are human towers built by people, usually at
    drunken festivals, standing on each other's shoulders up
    to 35 feet.

    5. Hurling: a field sport between two teams, dating back 2000 years.

    6. Cultural practices pertaining to the production and consumption
    of couscous: these are traditional ceremonies surrounding the
    preparation of this delicious dish.

    7. Washi: a traditional paper-making technique using the fibers
    of the mulberry plant.

    8. Rumba: music and dance combining elements of African, Antillean,
    and Spanish cultures.

    9. Sauna culture: an integral part of the daily lives of the people
    of this nation.

    10. The culture of borscht cooking: memorialized in tradition and
    song in this country.


    * Game 2, Round 3 - Literature - Musicians Who Write

    A round about artists that are best known as musicians, but who have
    produced poetry or prose works (excluding memoirs). In each case
    name that artist/writer.

    1. This American author, musician, and self-described
    "bluesologist", took two years off university to write "The
    Vulture", the first of two novels, and received an MA in creative
    writing in 1972. His poetry covered issues like race relations
    in the US, consumerism, hypocrisy, and ignorance, and morphed
    into spoken-word recordings, the most famous of which was
    "The Revolution Will Not Be Televised".

    2. She is the co-author of a manga series about Princess Ai, a
    winged amnesiac alien who finds herself in Tokyo. The character,
    just like the author, is a rock star in love with a sensitive
    musician. The author is best known as the lead singer of 1990's
    grunge band Hole, and for her relationship with one the grunge
    genre's leading lights.

    3. This American-born musician's interest in Kabbalah inspired her
    to write a series of 7 children's picture books, beginning with
    2003's "The English Roses". She later co-wrote 12 chapter books
    based on the original "English Roses" characters. Musically,
    she rose to fame in 1983 with a self-titled studio album and
    is known for her constant reinvention.

    4. This British singer with a single name rose to fame in the
    1980s fronting a band which specialized in angst-filled
    lyrics about sexual longing and isolation over a jangly guitar
    background. He went solo in 1988. His memoir was well received,
    but his 2015 novel "List of the Lost" received negative reviews
    and a Literary Review Bad Sex in Fiction award.

    5. This American songwriter and folk musician wrote a novel in
    1947 not published until 2013, titled "House of Earth", about
    the life of a couple in Dust Bowl America, which is unsurprising
    as he was known as "The Dust Bowl Troubadour". His 1943 novel
    "Bound for Glory", a fictionalized autobiography, was much better
    received and made into a movie in 1976 with David Carradine as
    the folk singer.

    6. This American pop musician with a cult following was living in
    Key West and wanted to write a book that would read easily while
    sitting on the beach. The result was the 1992 novel, "Where is
    Joe Merchant?" He has written 7 books in total, including a 1989
    short-story collection about laid-back living, aging beach bums,
    and adventurers -- all the themes he sings about.

    7. This British-American dramatist wrote the book or score -- and
    sometimes both -- for many award-winning musicals of the last
    40 years, including "The Mystery of Edwin Drood". He adapted
    Grisham's novel "A Time to Kill" for the stage in 2011.
    He published his first novel "Where the Truth Lies" in 2003
    and his second novel last year. But, sadly, he'll be best
    remembered for his 1979 hit song about a man who takes out a
    personal ad to escape his boring marriage.

    8. She is a flamboyant, immediately recognizable country musician
    with a decades-long career and 3,000 songwriting credits,
    who has also written cookbooks, children's books, memoirs,
    and collections of poetry and lyrics. She joined thriller
    writer James Paterson in writing the 2022 novel "Run, Rose,
    Run", about a singer who arrives in Nashville trying to escape
    her past.

    9. This Canadian musician was a published writer before he released
    any music, having released two poetry collections and two
    novels by 1966. In 1967 he moved to New York to begin a fabled
    songwriting career. A collection of short stories, a novella,
    and a play was published in 2022, six years after his death.

    10. This Scottish-born American frontman for a popular new wave-
    post-punk art band of the late 70's and '80s was known for his
    interesting lyrics and for riding a bicycle as his primary
    means of transport. He wrote an interesting 2010 manifesto
    about cycling, "Bicycle Diaries", recounting his thoughts as
    he pedaled around major cities. Hopefully his big suit didn't
    get in the way.

    --
    Mark Brader | "...having compressed some 300 million years into
    Toronto | two paragraphs, I have left out some details."
    [email protected] | -- Roger Gary

    My text in this article is in the public domain.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Dan Blum@21:1/5 to Mark Brader on Sat Feb 24 23:43:08 2024
    Mark Brader <[email protected]> wrote:

    * Game 2, Round 2 - Geography - UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage

    1. Kirkpinar Oil Wrestling Festival: a tradition in this country
    since 1360.

    Turkey

    2. Capoeira dance: a mixed style of fighting and dancing.

    Brazil

    3. Gamelan: a traditional percussion orchestra using hand-forged
    metal gongs, cymbals, and other percussives.

    Indonesia

    4. Castells: these are human towers built by people, usually at
    drunken festivals, standing on each other's shoulders up
    to 35 feet.

    Spain

    5. Hurling: a field sport between two teams, dating back 2000 years.

    Ireland

    6. Cultural practices pertaining to the production and consumption
    of couscous: these are traditional ceremonies surrounding the
    preparation of this delicious dish.

    Morocco

    7. Washi: a traditional paper-making technique using the fibers
    of the mulberry plant.

    Japan

    8. Rumba: music and dance combining elements of African, Antillean,
    and Spanish cultures.

    Cuba

    9. Sauna culture: an integral part of the daily lives of the people
    of this nation.

    Finland

    10. The culture of borscht cooking: memorialized in tradition and
    song in this country.

    Russia

    * Game 2, Round 3 - Literature - Musicians Who Write

    2. She is the co-author of a manga series about Princess Ai, a
    winged amnesiac alien who finds herself in Tokyo. The character,
    just like the author, is a rock star in love with a sensitive
    musician. The author is best known as the lead singer of 1990's
    grunge band Hole, and for her relationship with one the grunge
    genre's leading lights.

    Courtney Love

    3. This American-born musician's interest in Kabbalah inspired her
    to write a series of 7 children's picture books, beginning with
    2003's "The English Roses". She later co-wrote 12 chapter books
    based on the original "English Roses" characters. Musically,
    she rose to fame in 1983 with a self-titled studio album and
    is known for her constant reinvention.

    Madonna

    4. This British singer with a single name rose to fame in the
    1980s fronting a band which specialized in angst-filled
    lyrics about sexual longing and isolation over a jangly guitar
    background. He went solo in 1988. His memoir was well received,
    but his 2015 novel "List of the Lost" received negative reviews
    and a Literary Review Bad Sex in Fiction award.

    Morissey

    5. This American songwriter and folk musician wrote a novel in
    1947 not published until 2013, titled "House of Earth", about
    the life of a couple in Dust Bowl America, which is unsurprising
    as he was known as "The Dust Bowl Troubadour". His 1943 novel
    "Bound for Glory", a fictionalized autobiography, was much better
    received and made into a movie in 1976 with David Carradine as
    the folk singer.

    Woody Guthrie

    6. This American pop musician with a cult following was living in
    Key West and wanted to write a book that would read easily while
    sitting on the beach. The result was the 1992 novel, "Where is
    Joe Merchant?" He has written 7 books in total, including a 1989
    short-story collection about laid-back living, aging beach bums,
    and adventurers -- all the themes he sings about.

    Jimmy Buffett

    8. She is a flamboyant, immediately recognizable country musician
    with a decades-long career and 3,000 songwriting credits,
    who has also written cookbooks, children's books, memoirs,
    and collections of poetry and lyrics. She joined thriller
    writer James Paterson in writing the 2022 novel "Run, Rose,
    Run", about a singer who arrives in Nashville trying to escape
    her past.

    Dolly Parton

    10. This Scottish-born American frontman for a popular new wave-
    post-punk art band of the late 70's and '80s was known for his
    interesting lyrics and for riding a bicycle as his primary
    means of transport. He wrote an interesting 2010 manifesto
    about cycling, "Bicycle Diaries", recounting his thoughts as
    he pedaled around major cities. Hopefully his big suit didn't
    get in the way.

    David Byrne

    --
    _______________________________________________________________________
    Dan Blum [email protected]
    "I wouldn't have believed it myself if I hadn't just made it up."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Joshua Kreitzer@21:1/5 to Mark Brader on Sat Feb 24 22:59:28 2024
    Hopefully this will work, as I am now using Thunderbird and
    Eternal-September instead of Google Groups.

    On 2/24/2024 3:54 PM, Mark Brader wrote:

    * Game 2, Round 2 - Geography - UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage

    We're all familiar with UNESCO's World Heritage Sites, but UNESCO
    also has a registry of cultural activities that exemplify a
    national culture and form a part of world heritage -- everything
    from loincloth weaving in Côte d'Ivoire to opera training in Italy.

    In each case we'll give the intangible, and you tell what *country*
    that has been granted the designation.

    1. Kirkpinar Oil Wrestling Festival: a tradition in this country
    since 1360.

    Mongolia

    2. Capoeira dance: a mixed style of fighting and dancing.

    Brazil

    3. Gamelan: a traditional percussion orchestra using hand-forged
    metal gongs, cymbals, and other percussives.

    Indonesia

    4. Castells: these are human towers built by people, usually at
    drunken festivals, standing on each other's shoulders up
    to 35 feet.

    Spain

    5. Hurling: a field sport between two teams, dating back 2000 years.

    Ireland

    6. Cultural practices pertaining to the production and consumption
    of couscous: these are traditional ceremonies surrounding the
    preparation of this delicious dish.

    Morocco; Algeria

    7. Washi: a traditional paper-making technique using the fibers
    of the mulberry plant.

    Japan

    8. Rumba: music and dance combining elements of African, Antillean,
    and Spanish cultures.

    Cuba

    9. Sauna culture: an integral part of the daily lives of the people
    of this nation.

    Finland

    10. The culture of borscht cooking: memorialized in tradition and
    song in this country.

    Ukraine; Russia

    * Game 2, Round 3 - Literature - Musicians Who Write

    A round about artists that are best known as musicians, but who have
    produced poetry or prose works (excluding memoirs). In each case
    name that artist/writer.

    1. This American author, musician, and self-described
    "bluesologist", took two years off university to write "The
    Vulture", the first of two novels, and received an MA in creative
    writing in 1972. His poetry covered issues like race relations
    in the US, consumerism, hypocrisy, and ignorance, and morphed
    into spoken-word recordings, the most famous of which was
    "The Revolution Will Not Be Televised".

    Scott-Heron

    2. She is the co-author of a manga series about Princess Ai, a
    winged amnesiac alien who finds herself in Tokyo. The character,
    just like the author, is a rock star in love with a sensitive
    musician. The author is best known as the lead singer of 1990's
    grunge band Hole, and for her relationship with one the grunge
    genre's leading lights.

    Courtney Love

    3. This American-born musician's interest in Kabbalah inspired her
    to write a series of 7 children's picture books, beginning with
    2003's "The English Roses". She later co-wrote 12 chapter books
    based on the original "English Roses" characters. Musically,
    she rose to fame in 1983 with a self-titled studio album and
    is known for her constant reinvention.

    Madonna

    4. This British singer with a single name rose to fame in the
    1980s fronting a band which specialized in angst-filled
    lyrics about sexual longing and isolation over a jangly guitar
    background. He went solo in 1988. His memoir was well received,
    but his 2015 novel "List of the Lost" received negative reviews
    and a Literary Review Bad Sex in Fiction award.

    Morrissey

    5. This American songwriter and folk musician wrote a novel in
    1947 not published until 2013, titled "House of Earth", about
    the life of a couple in Dust Bowl America, which is unsurprising
    as he was known as "The Dust Bowl Troubadour". His 1943 novel
    "Bound for Glory", a fictionalized autobiography, was much better
    received and made into a movie in 1976 with David Carradine as
    the folk singer.

    Woody Guthrie

    6. This American pop musician with a cult following was living in
    Key West and wanted to write a book that would read easily while
    sitting on the beach. The result was the 1992 novel, "Where is
    Joe Merchant?" He has written 7 books in total, including a 1989
    short-story collection about laid-back living, aging beach bums,
    and adventurers -- all the themes he sings about.

    Jimmy Buffett

    7. This British-American dramatist wrote the book or score -- and
    sometimes both -- for many award-winning musicals of the last
    40 years, including "The Mystery of Edwin Drood". He adapted
    Grisham's novel "A Time to Kill" for the stage in 2011.
    He published his first novel "Where the Truth Lies" in 2003
    and his second novel last year. But, sadly, he'll be best
    remembered for his 1979 hit song about a man who takes out a
    personal ad to escape his boring marriage.

    Rupert Holmes

    8. She is a flamboyant, immediately recognizable country musician
    with a decades-long career and 3,000 songwriting credits,
    who has also written cookbooks, children's books, memoirs,
    and collections of poetry and lyrics. She joined thriller
    writer James Paterson in writing the 2022 novel "Run, Rose,
    Run", about a singer who arrives in Nashville trying to escape
    her past.

    Dolly Parton

    9. This Canadian musician was a published writer before he released
    any music, having released two poetry collections and two
    novels by 1966. In 1967 he moved to New York to begin a fabled
    songwriting career. A collection of short stories, a novella,
    and a play was published in 2022, six years after his death.

    Leonard Cohen

    10. This Scottish-born American frontman for a popular new wave-
    post-punk art band of the late 70's and '80s was known for his
    interesting lyrics and for riding a bicycle as his primary
    means of transport. He wrote an interesting 2010 manifesto
    about cycling, "Bicycle Diaries", recounting his thoughts as
    he pedaled around major cities. Hopefully his big suit didn't
    get in the way.

    David Byrne

    --
    Joshua Kreitzer
    [email protected]

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Dan Tilque@21:1/5 to Mark Brader on Sun Feb 25 08:24:40 2024
    On 2/24/24 13:54, Mark Brader wrote:


    * Game 2, Round 2 - Geography - UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage

    We're all familiar with UNESCO's World Heritage Sites, but UNESCO
    also has a registry of cultural activities that exemplify a
    national culture and form a part of world heritage -- everything
    from loincloth weaving in Côte d'Ivoire to opera training in Italy.

    In each case we'll give the intangible, and you tell what *country*
    that has been granted the designation.

    1. Kirkpinar Oil Wrestling Festival: a tradition in this country
    since 1360.

    2. Capoeira dance: a mixed style of fighting and dancing.

    3. Gamelan: a traditional percussion orchestra using hand-forged
    metal gongs, cymbals, and other percussives.

    4. Castells: these are human towers built by people, usually at
    drunken festivals, standing on each other's shoulders up
    to 35 feet.

    5. Hurling: a field sport between two teams, dating back 2000 years.

    Ireland


    6. Cultural practices pertaining to the production and consumption
    of couscous: these are traditional ceremonies surrounding the
    preparation of this delicious dish.

    Lebanon


    7. Washi: a traditional paper-making technique using the fibers
    of the mulberry plant.

    China


    8. Rumba: music and dance combining elements of African, Antillean,
    and Spanish cultures.

    Trinidad and Tobago


    9. Sauna culture: an integral part of the daily lives of the people
    of this nation.

    Finland


    10. The culture of borscht cooking: memorialized in tradition and
    song in this country.

    Belarus



    * Game 2, Round 3 - Literature - Musicians Who Write

    A round about artists that are best known as musicians, but who have
    produced poetry or prose works (excluding memoirs). In each case
    name that artist/writer.

    1. This American author, musician, and self-described
    "bluesologist", took two years off university to write "The
    Vulture", the first of two novels, and received an MA in creative
    writing in 1972. His poetry covered issues like race relations
    in the US, consumerism, hypocrisy, and ignorance, and morphed
    into spoken-word recordings, the most famous of which was
    "The Revolution Will Not Be Televised".

    2. She is the co-author of a manga series about Princess Ai, a
    winged amnesiac alien who finds herself in Tokyo. The character,
    just like the author, is a rock star in love with a sensitive
    musician. The author is best known as the lead singer of 1990's
    grunge band Hole, and for her relationship with one the grunge
    genre's leading lights.

    Courtney Love


    3. This American-born musician's interest in Kabbalah inspired her
    to write a series of 7 children's picture books, beginning with
    2003's "The English Roses". She later co-wrote 12 chapter books
    based on the original "English Roses" characters. Musically,
    she rose to fame in 1983 with a self-titled studio album and
    is known for her constant reinvention.

    4. This British singer with a single name rose to fame in the
    1980s fronting a band which specialized in angst-filled
    lyrics about sexual longing and isolation over a jangly guitar
    background. He went solo in 1988. His memoir was well received,
    but his 2015 novel "List of the Lost" received negative reviews
    and a Literary Review Bad Sex in Fiction award.

    Sting


    5. This American songwriter and folk musician wrote a novel in
    1947 not published until 2013, titled "House of Earth", about
    the life of a couple in Dust Bowl America, which is unsurprising
    as he was known as "The Dust Bowl Troubadour". His 1943 novel
    "Bound for Glory", a fictionalized autobiography, was much better
    received and made into a movie in 1976 with David Carradine as
    the folk singer.

    6. This American pop musician with a cult following was living in
    Key West and wanted to write a book that would read easily while
    sitting on the beach. The result was the 1992 novel, "Where is
    Joe Merchant?" He has written 7 books in total, including a 1989
    short-story collection about laid-back living, aging beach bums,
    and adventurers -- all the themes he sings about.

    Jimmy Buffet


    7. This British-American dramatist wrote the book or score -- and
    sometimes both -- for many award-winning musicals of the last
    40 years, including "The Mystery of Edwin Drood". He adapted
    Grisham's novel "A Time to Kill" for the stage in 2011.
    He published his first novel "Where the Truth Lies" in 2003
    and his second novel last year. But, sadly, he'll be best
    remembered for his 1979 hit song about a man who takes out a
    personal ad to escape his boring marriage.

    8. She is a flamboyant, immediately recognizable country musician
    with a decades-long career and 3,000 songwriting credits,
    who has also written cookbooks, children's books, memoirs,
    and collections of poetry and lyrics. She joined thriller
    writer James Paterson in writing the 2022 novel "Run, Rose,
    Run", about a singer who arrives in Nashville trying to escape
    her past.

    9. This Canadian musician was a published writer before he released
    any music, having released two poetry collections and two
    novels by 1966. In 1967 he moved to New York to begin a fabled
    songwriting career. A collection of short stories, a novella,
    and a play was published in 2022, six years after his death.

    10. This Scottish-born American frontman for a popular new wave-
    post-punk art band of the late 70's and '80s was known for his
    interesting lyrics and for riding a bicycle as his primary
    means of transport. He wrote an interesting 2010 manifesto
    about cycling, "Bicycle Diaries", recounting his thoughts as
    he pedaled around major cities. Hopefully his big suit didn't
    get in the way.



    --
    Dan Tilque

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Erland Sommarskog@21:1/5 to Mark Brader on Sun Feb 25 20:06:42 2024
    Mark Brader ([email protected]) writes:
    * Game 2, Round 2 - Geography - UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage

    1. Kirkpinar Oil Wrestling Festival: a tradition in this country
    since 1360.

    Scotland

    2. Capoeira dance: a mixed style of fighting and dancing.

    Brazil

    4. Castells: these are human towers built by people, usually at
    drunken festivals, standing on each other's shoulders up
    to 35 feet.

    Spain

    5. Hurling: a field sport between two teams, dating back 2000 years.

    Ireland


    6. Cultural practices pertaining to the production and consumption
    of couscous: these are traditional ceremonies surrounding the
    preparation of this delicious dish.

    Morroco

    9. Sauna culture: an integral part of the daily lives of the people
    of this nation.

    Finland

    10. The culture of borscht cooking: memorialized in tradition and
    song in this country.

    Russia

    * Game 2, Round 3 - Literature - Musicians Who Write

    2. She is the co-author of a manga series about Princess Ai, a
    winged amnesiac alien who finds herself in Tokyo. The character,
    just like the author, is a rock star in love with a sensitive
    musician. The author is best known as the lead singer of 1990's
    grunge band Hole, and for her relationship with one the grunge
    genre's leading lights.

    Courrney Hole

    3. This American-born musician's interest in Kabbalah inspired her
    to write a series of 7 children's picture books, beginning with
    2003's "The English Roses". She later co-wrote 12 chapter books
    based on the original "English Roses" characters. Musically,
    she rose to fame in 1983 with a self-titled studio album and
    is known for her constant reinvention.

    Madonna

    4. This British singer with a single name rose to fame in the
    1980s fronting a band which specialized in angst-filled
    lyrics about sexual longing and isolation over a jangly guitar
    background. He went solo in 1988. His memoir was well received,
    but his 2015 novel "List of the Lost" received negative reviews
    and a Literary Review Bad Sex in Fiction award.

    Morrisey

    6. This American pop musician with a cult following was living in
    Key West and wanted to write a book that would read easily while
    sitting on the beach. The result was the 1992 novel, "Where is
    Joe Merchant?" He has written 7 books in total, including a 1989
    short-story collection about laid-back living, aging beach bums,
    and adventurers -- all the themes he sings about.

    Brian Wilson

    8. She is a flamboyant, immediately recognizable country musician
    with a decades-long career and 3,000 songwriting credits,
    who has also written cookbooks, children's books, memoirs,
    and collections of poetry and lyrics. She joined thriller
    writer James Paterson in writing the 2022 novel "Run, Rose,
    Run", about a singer who arrives in Nashville trying to escape
    her past.

    Dolly Parton

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mark Brader@21:1/5 to All on Wed Feb 28 01:32:24 2024
    Mark Brader:
    These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2024-02-05,
    and should be interpreted accordingly... For further information
    please see my 2023-05-24 companion posting on "Questions from the
    Canadian Inquisition (QFTCI*)".


    * Game 2, Round 2 - Geography - UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage

    We're all familiar with UNESCO's World Heritage Sites, but UNESCO
    also has a registry of cultural activities that exemplify a
    national culture and form a part of world heritage -- everything
    from loincloth weaving in C�te d'Ivoire to opera training in Italy.

    In each case we'll give the intangible, and you tell what *country*
    that has been granted the designation.

    1. Kirkpinar Oil Wrestling Festival: a tradition in this country
    since 1360.

    Turkey. 4 for Dan Blum.

    2. Capoeira dance: a mixed style of fighting and dancing.

    Brazil. 4 for Dan Blum, Joshua, and Erland. 2 for Pete.

    3. Gamelan: a traditional percussion orchestra using hand-forged
    metal gongs, cymbals, and other percussives.

    Indonesia. 4 for Dan Blum, Joshua, and Pete.

    4. Castells: these are human towers built by people, usually at
    drunken festivals, standing on each other's shoulders up
    to 35 feet.

    Spain. 4 for Dan Blum, Joshua, and Erland.

    5. Hurling: a field sport between two teams, dating back 2000 years.

    Ireland. 4 for everyone -- Dan Blum, Joshua, Pete, Dan Tilque,
    and Erland.

    6. Cultural practices pertaining to the production and consumption
    of couscous: these are traditional ceremonies surrounding the
    preparation of this delicious dish.

    Algeria, Mauritania, Morocco, and Tunisia. (Accepting any one.)
    4 for Dan Blum, Joshua (the hard way), Pete, and Erland.

    7. Washi: a traditional paper-making technique using the fibers
    of the mulberry plant.

    Japan. 4 for Dan Blum and Joshua.

    8. Rumba: music and dance combining elements of African, Antillean,
    and Spanish cultures.

    Cuba. 4 for Dan Blum and Joshua.

    9. Sauna culture: an integral part of the daily lives of the people
    of this nation.

    Finland. 4 for everyone.

    10. The culture of borscht cooking: memorialized in tradition and
    song in this country.

    Ukraine. 3 for Joshua. 2 for Pete.


    * Game 2, Round 3 - Literature - Musicians Who Write

    A round about artists that are best known as musicians, but who have
    produced poetry or prose works (excluding memoirs). In each case
    name that artist/writer.

    This was the easiest round in the original game.

    1. This American author, musician, and self-described
    "bluesologist", took two years off university to write "The
    Vulture", the first of two novels, and received an MA in creative
    writing in 1972. His poetry covered issues like race relations
    in the US, consumerism, hypocrisy, and ignorance, and morphed
    into spoken-word recordings, the most famous of which was
    "The Revolution Will Not Be Televised".

    Gil Scott-Heron. 4 for Joshua and Pete.

    2. She is the co-author of a manga series about Princess Ai, a
    winged amnesiac alien who finds herself in Tokyo. The character,
    just like the author, is a rock star in love with a sensitive
    musician. The author is best known as the lead singer of 1990's
    grunge band Hole, and for her relationship with one the grunge
    genre's leading lights.

    Courtney Love. 4 for everyone.

    3. This American-born musician's interest in Kabbalah inspired her
    to write a series of 7 children's picture books, beginning with
    2003's "The English Roses". She later co-wrote 12 chapter books
    based on the original "English Roses" characters. Musically,
    she rose to fame in 1983 with a self-titled studio album and
    is known for her constant reinvention.

    Madonna. 4 for Dan Blum, Joshua, and Erland.

    4. This British singer with a single name rose to fame in the
    1980s fronting a band which specialized in angst-filled
    lyrics about sexual longing and isolation over a jangly guitar
    background. He went solo in 1988. His memoir was well received,
    but his 2015 novel "List of the Lost" received negative reviews
    and a Literary Review Bad Sex in Fiction award.

    Morrissey. 4 for Dan Blum, Joshua, and Erland.

    They all spelled it differently; Joshua got that right.

    5. This American songwriter and folk musician wrote a novel in
    1947 not published until 2013, titled "House of Earth", about
    the life of a couple in Dust Bowl America, which is unsurprising
    as he was known as "The Dust Bowl Troubadour". His 1943 novel
    "Bound for Glory", a fictionalized autobiography, was much better
    received and made into a movie in 1976 with David Carradine as
    the folk singer.

    Woody Guthrie. 4 for Dan Blum, Joshua, and Pete.

    The first name -- which, as mentioned on "Jeopardy!" earlier this
    month, on 2024-02-06 to be exact, was in honor of President Wilson --
    was not required.

    6. This American pop musician with a cult following was living in
    Key West and wanted to write a book that would read easily while
    sitting on the beach. The result was the 1992 novel, "Where is
    Joe Merchant?" He has written 7 books in total, including a 1989
    short-story collection about laid-back living, aging beach bums,
    and adventurers -- all the themes he sings about.

    Jimmy Buffett. 4 for Dan Blum, Joshua, Pete, and Dan Tilque.

    7. This British-American dramatist wrote the book or score -- and
    sometimes both -- for many award-winning musicals of the last
    40 years, including "The Mystery of Edwin Drood". He adapted
    Grisham's novel "A Time to Kill" for the stage in 2011.
    He published his first novel "Where the Truth Lies" in 2003
    and his second novel last year. But, sadly, he'll be best
    remembered for his 1979 hit song about a man who takes out a
    personal ad to escape his boring marriage.

    Rupert Holmes. ("Escape", aka the Pi�a Colada song -- as mentioned on "Jeopardy!" last week, on 2024-02-21 to be exact.) 4 for Joshua.

    8. She is a flamboyant, immediately recognizable country musician
    with a decades-long career and 3,000 songwriting credits,
    who has also written cookbooks, children's books, memoirs,
    and collections of poetry and lyrics. She joined thriller
    writer James Paterson in writing the 2022 novel "Run, Rose,
    Run", about a singer who arrives in Nashville trying to escape
    her past.

    Dolly Parton. 4 for Dan Blum, Joshua, Pete, and Erland.

    9. This Canadian musician was a published writer before he released
    any music, having released two poetry collections and two
    novels by 1966. In 1967 he moved to New York to begin a fabled
    songwriting career. A collection of short stories, a novella,
    and a play was published in 2022, six years after his death.

    Leonard Cohen. 4 for Joshua.

    10. This Scottish-born American frontman for a popular new wave-
    post-punk art band of the late 70's and '80s was known for his
    interesting lyrics and for riding a bicycle as his primary
    means of transport. He wrote an interesting 2010 manifesto
    about cycling, "Bicycle Diaries", recounting his thoughts as
    he pedaled around major cities. Hopefully his big suit didn't
    get in the way.

    David Byrne. 4 for Dan Blum and Joshua.


    Scores, if there are no errors:

    GAME 2 ROUNDS-> 2 3 TOTALS
    TOPICS-> Geo Lit
    Joshua Kreitzer 35 40 75
    Dan Blum 36 28 64
    Pete Gayde 20 20 40
    Erland Sommarskog 20 16 36
    Dan Tilque 8 8 16

    --
    Mark Brader | Yet again, I begged him to explain himself in plain Toronto | English. This request always surprises him, as he [email protected] | is always under the extraordinary impression that
    | he has done so. -- Lynn & Jay, "Yes Minister"

    My text in this article is in the public domain.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Erland Sommarskog@21:1/5 to Mark Brader on Wed Feb 28 21:06:34 2024
    Mark Brader ([email protected]) writes:
    2. She is the co-author of a manga series about Princess Ai, a
    winged amnesiac alien who finds herself in Tokyo. The character,
    just like the author, is a rock star in love with a sensitive
    musician. The author is best known as the lead singer of 1990's
    grunge band Hole, and for her relationship with one the grunge
    genre's leading lights.

    Courtney Love. 4 for everyone.

    Really? You cannot read have my answer very closely.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mark Brader@21:1/5 to All on Thu Feb 29 10:50:59 2024
    Mark Brader:
    2. She is the co-author of a manga series about Princess Ai, a
    winged amnesiac alien who finds herself in Tokyo. The character,
    just like the author, is a rock star in love with a sensitive
    musician. The author is best known as the lead singer of 1990's
    grunge band Hole, and for her relationship with one the grunge
    genre's leading lights.

    Courtney Love. 4 for everyone.

    Erland Sommarskog:
    Really? You cannot read have my answer very closely.

    Oops. 4 for Dan Blum, Joshua, Pete, and Dan Tilque, then. Thanks, Erland.

    Scores, if there are now no errors:

    GAME 2 ROUNDS-> 2 3 TOTALS
    TOPICS-> Geo Lit
    Joshua Kreitzer 35 40 75
    Dan Blum 36 28 64
    Pete Gayde 20 20 40
    Erland Sommarskog 20 12 32
    Dan Tilque 8 8 16
    --
    Mark Brader, Toronto "Truth speak from any chair."
    [email protected] -- Charlie Chan at the Wax Museum

    My text in this article is in the public domain.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)