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OT - The Pub Quiz Thread

Discussion in 'Queens Park Rangers' started by Rollercoaster Ranger, Jun 15, 2013.

  1. QPR999

    QPR999 Well-Known Member Staff Member

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    Well it's 'The Fighting Temeraire.' painted by JMW Turner. The ship was tugged from Sheerness to a ship breakers yard in Rotherhithe in south east London. So I think the answer is Rotherhithe unless the answer you require is more specific and therefore a little quirkier.
     
    #2321
  2. sb_73

    sb_73 Well-Known Member

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    That's so close you deserve it Nines. One of my favourite pictures of the last purely sail powered battleship, actually painted from a couple of hundred yards down the river, in Bermondsey.

    On Bermondsey, was there on Friday night. Haven't been there for a very, very long time, wow it's changed, massively for the better. Bermondsey Street is very cool indeed good pubs, restaurants, artisany kinds of shops, not a chain store/ plate glass window in sight. Only spoiled by the estate agents. Jose is the most authentic tapas bar I have found in the UK, except for the distinctly unSpanish prices.
     
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  3. QPR999

    QPR999 Well-Known Member Staff Member

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    Cheers Stan, I haven't really ventured into that part of London since my Fire Brigade training days. The training centre was in Southwark near the Borough tube and on a Friday evening we'd pub crawl to London Bridge. Usually ending up in The Old Kings Head. We used to go slightly east to Bermondsey Village on the odd occasion, but can't remember the pub we used to go in, possibly the Hand and Marigold?
    Strange you should mention Jose's as Jose Pizarro is a well renowned Spanish chef and also set-up the Brindisa Tapas chain. As a keen amateur chef myself I've been meaning to get his book 'Seasonal Spanish Food' which has had excellent reviews since it's release.

    Anyway, I digress. The Temeraire was part of Nelson's fleet at the Battle of Trafalgar. Where in London did Nelsen live and what was the name of the house where he had a strange set-up with Lady Hamilton and her husband?
     
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  4. Sooperhoop

    Sooperhoop Well-Known Member

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    Would that be Merton Place?...
     
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  5. sb_73

    sb_73 Well-Known Member

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    Just looked it up Nines, and this place, 104 Bermondsey Street, on the corner of Morocco Street and next to the Woolpack Pub and the Garrison (The Marigold is just down the road, still a proper boozer by the look of it) is actually run by Jose Pizarro. It was genuinely very good, had we not been booked into the bald one from Masterchef's restaurant, which was very average, we would have stayed there all night which could have proved ruinous at £25 for two glasses of wine and a plate of chorizo and salami.

    However, I was so impressed that I would be delighted to buy the first round there for all who wish to join me after a match some time. Bit of a trip and in totally the wrong direction for me, but I'm sure Mrs SB would welcome an afternoon in town and meeting there, she loved it too.

    The answer to this question is buried deep in my sub conscious, and I refuse to look it up. Something House......
     
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  6. QPR999

    QPR999 Well-Known Member Staff Member

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    #2326

  7. sb_73

    sb_73 Well-Known Member

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    I failed mate, its Sooper's go.
     
    #2327
  8. Sooperhoop

    Sooperhoop Well-Known Member

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    The two-part single entitled 'Testify' by The Isley Brothers is unique for what reason?...
     
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  9. QPR999

    QPR999 Well-Known Member Staff Member

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    Of course mate, my apologies. I should of realised that Sooper is our 'London Specialist' and would've been all over that question. I'm going to have to come up with a real corker of a gem to flummox him on London at my next opportunity.
     
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  10. kiwiqpr

    kiwiqpr Barnsie Mod

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    my my my
    how things have improved
     
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  11. sb_73

    sb_73 Well-Known Member

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    With the help of wiki, because Hendrix played on it? But I don't think that makes it unique.....
     
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  12. 4StringR

    4StringR Active Member

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    Is it something to do with the fact that it had the same song title on the A and B but both tracks are different?
     
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  13. Shawswood

    Shawswood Well-Known Member

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    I didn't know that the Isley brothers first names were Ronald, O Kelly and Rudolph!!
     
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  14. 4StringR

    4StringR Active Member

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    And don't forget Ernie and Marvin (never forget the bass player!!)
     
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  15. Sooperhoop

    Sooperhoop Well-Known Member

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    You're getting warm Stan, it is unique...
     
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  16. surreyhoop

    surreyhoop Well-Known Member

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    Something about Hendrix playing on it, but it failed to chart?
     
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  17. Sooperhoop

    Sooperhoop Well-Known Member

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    The record did bomb and failed to chart but that's not the answer. A clue is the answer is historic...
     
    #2337
  18. surreyhoop

    surreyhoop Well-Known Member

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    Ah, could it be that the recording date is not actually known?
     
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  19. Shawswood

    Shawswood Well-Known Member

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    Arguably invented funk with the sound produced on that single
     
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  20. Sooperhoop

    Sooperhoop Well-Known Member

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    It was in 1964, but it is a significant recording...
     
    #2340

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