Happy birthday. Enjoy and don't drink vodka and ...
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Happy birthday. Enjoy and don't drink vodka and ...
Happy Birthday and many more to come. You paint a beautiful picture with words.
Happy Birthday, Obie! It's a relief to know you're only 27--that means we'll have the pleasure of your elegant, thoughtful posts for many years to come! Here's to you, my friend! :beer1:
Brook
I don't know you Obie, but from reading your posts you strike me as a true gentleman.
As a new member here, your posts, to me at least, personify the spirit of SRP and help make my experience of visiting these boards a real pleasure.
Happy birthday!
Have a wonderful birthday Obie *hug*
Happy birthday!
You have given me lots of advice and guidance with your amazing posts. I hope to be able to help someone even half as much as you have for many of us.
Ps what is this Obie opus? Sounds interesting:p
Dear Uballit
May this year prove to be yet another year of health and prosperity. Furthermore, may 2010 (or your 27th year of celebration) harbor more additions to your Thiers Issard collection.
Did you hear? Thiers Issard is rumored to be forging a new blank called the "Obi(e) One Kenobi - Mark 27"!!:rofl2::roflmao
Have a wonderful and very happy birthday. Celebrate it with a bang...wish I was there to celebrate it with you, but since I can't...this one's for you Maestro :beer1:. Cheers!
Happy birthday Obie. May you have many beautiful shaves to satisfy your desires. ;)
Mick
Hello, basil:
Than you for the good wishes, and for the kind words. I am delighted to help out fellow gentlemen shavers.
"Obie's Opus" is my second book. The first, my novel, "Will's Music," is a gentle, sweet and sentimental love story set in the world of radio and dance in San Francisco. My good friend and SRP member LinacMan just finished reading "Will's Music" and tells me he liked it. That's good.
"Obie's Opus," on the other hand, is a collection of humorous anecdotes and little stories about the lives of the great composers. Also, "Obie's Opus" has a few autobiographical notes. Here's a snippet from the book:
When composer Giacomo Meyerbeer died, his nephew, while visiting Rossini, insisted on playing the march he had written for his uncle's funeral. Rossini listened to it. "Very nice," he said, "but wouldn't it have been better if you had died and your uncle had composed the march?"
The renowned conductor Toscanini loved everything about women: the games, the courtship and the ceremonies. He once wrote: "When I was very young, I kissed my first woman and smoked my first cigarette on the same day and, believe me, never since have I wasted any more time on tobacco."
Anyway, the book is full is little stories like that. Thanks for asking.
Regards,
Obie