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Turtle Account closed
Registered: Jan 2002 Posts: 70 |
Fred Gray's Hysteria inspired by Rondo Veniziano?
Recently I came across a clip on youtube from the german "Sendung mit der Maus" which was accompanied by some classical music which at once reminded me of Fred Gray's Hysteria #3 - one of the best tunes ever in c64 history. So I found out that the tv-tune is called "La Serenissima" from Rondò Veniziano (1981). I googled a little bit but couldn't find anything that covered the similarities of both tunes. Neither STIL has any comment. What do you think? Was Fred inspired by this one? Or is this just cold coffee and I didn't googled good enough?
Fred: http://www.tld-crew.de/c64music/MUSICIANS/G/Gray_Fred/Hysteria...
Rondo: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ej_wRgBS5lI
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JackAsser
Registered: Jun 2002 Posts: 2014 |
Quote: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZalC8kwl3QY \o/
Vote for APPD! Fantastic! :D Hahahahaha! |
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Danzig
Registered: Jun 2002 Posts: 440 |
Quote: Vote for APPD! Fantastic! :D Hahahahaha!
I did! |
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Angel of Death
Registered: Apr 2008 Posts: 211 |
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=na3EI8VGI7k&feature=related
mmmm...
Should we really vote for or except apologies from a guy with the pedo-bear on his desk...
:)
ps.
Always great to see how a perfect ordinary forum thread can suddenly turn into a nice old-fashiond row between Groepaz and Jan Harries.
:)) |
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SIDWAVE Account closed
Registered: Apr 2002 Posts: 2238 |
Groepaz and me are just incompatible :D |
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Angel of Death
Registered: Apr 2008 Posts: 211 |
You certainly strike a different chord eeeh interval eehhh octave eeehh I don't know anymore!
Maybe we should ask Rein for a fatwa on this? :) |
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Linus
Registered: Jun 2004 Posts: 639 |
A chord has to have at least three unique notes. Two notes form an interval or a so called 'fractual chord'. Case closed. |
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Angel of Death
Registered: Apr 2008 Posts: 211 |
Oh Linus. I love it when you're strict and ferm like that.
However.
To be scientific about it...
The very basics of a chord ALWAYS consists of the original note and the two first harmonics above it. That is the primordial definition of a chord. However. It is allowed to diminish a note or break the chord. And then in some cases the diminished note can end up at a note already in the chord or when you break-up a chord and transpose it so far that the higher note(s) reach the next octave it isn't regarded as part of the original chord anymore and has to be split up. Therefore in some cases it is possible to have two-note chords. Musically useless but possible... (use arpeggios instead!)
(source: "how music works..." ITV 2008) |
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NecroPolo
Registered: Jun 2009 Posts: 231 |
...are you STILL arguing about that...?!?
Awwww....
YES, IT IS. |
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Turtle Account closed
Registered: Jan 2002 Posts: 70 |
So, due to the thread turned upside down. How 'bout some chord or interval demo? |
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Linus
Registered: Jun 2004 Posts: 639 |
Nah, the subject is too sore :) |
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