Found this out something called the Venereal Game:
The Venereal Game is the provocative subtitle of James Lipton's 1968 classic, An Exaltation of Larks (reprinted in 1977, and later expanded in the 1993 "ultimate" edition). Venereal, in this sense, comes from venery which in turn comes from the Latin venari, to hunt or pursue, rather from the sexual connotation.
And further,
The game of inventing words to describe assemblages of animals or human beings is over 500 years old. The earliest collections of such terms are to be found in The Egerton Manuscript (1450) and, more definitively, The Boke of St Albans (1486), a collection written by Dame Juliana Berners. The modern source books for this information are An Exaltation of Larks . . .
So, after viewing examples of words associated with such groups, the word chosen to describe the grouping is not necessarily a word used to describe a collection of things, but a fanciful word which may be loosely related somehow to things being described. Like a pride, a murder, or a gaggle. Would a gobble of turkeys be an applicable thing? I have no idea.
But having said that, and also finding out that no one has seconded any of the given suggestions so far, and by the unilateral proposition of SF seconding his own suggestion, I will simply apply the same principle and declare that I like the Tonality of Taylors the best and will henceforth use that as a description if the occasion arises.
Besides I like the loose association of sound to a brand name of guitars.
I also liked the idea of a band, but it is in itself a term of connection.
And a trailer is something you can use to carry things, like a bag with wheels on it.
I generally like stuff that is both clever and imaginative, like a 'canvas of salesmen' or a 'suit of lawyers'. But that's just me.
Don
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