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3,968 posts
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Post by salteedog on Feb 14, 2019 12:55:22 GMT
Paging intenselycalm who if I'm not mistaken actually did build his own fret-press.
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Post by Vincent on Feb 14, 2019 12:59:35 GMT
Didn't know he was such a keen guitar player. Some say he was not the first with the twelve notes thing. Possibly something Chuck Berry never lost sleep over. I never did. What about uneven wear on the soles of our shoes? Do you have a remedy for that? I remember looking at some prelude by Bach with a work colleague and half seriously deducting he had written 11-tone music. Can't remember the exact piece, though, but of course it wasn't going for any of the points that Schönberg made and I do not know of precursors either. Liszt might have been the first to intentionally stray away from tonality, but that's nowhere near Schönberg: The first truly 12-tone based works (after the Walz op. 23 no 5), sounds quite different: I play sitting so soles are not a concern and cushions are cheap. I listened to and enjoyed the Piano Suite Forte in the second video very much. Maybe you can put your feet up on one of your cheap cushions and listen to this
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Post by blindwilly3fingers on Feb 14, 2019 13:01:27 GMT
Ah Humbrol paints RAF Barley Grey, Duck Egg Blue, Cockpit Green, Insignia Red etc
The joy of model making, good job the PlayStation or Xbox wasn't invented!
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Post by blindwilly3fingers on Feb 14, 2019 13:11:00 GMT
One of the inventors of two tone music???
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Post by blindwilly3fingers on Feb 14, 2019 13:19:04 GMT
Your lucky DefJef that certainly isn't the norm for most kids these days. I worked with a guy a few years ago who was in the top ten online for call of duty! This guy was in his 40's, he spent all his spare time at it! I suppose each to his own.
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DefJef
THBC Moderator
Due to musical differences I've decided I can't work with myself any more.
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Post by DefJef on Feb 14, 2019 13:24:38 GMT
Ah Humbrol paints RAF Barley Grey, Duck Egg Blue, Cockpit Green, Insignia Red etc The joy of model making, good job the PlayStation or Xbox wasn't invented! Not only that but I also learned about a great number of uniform parts that I would never have found out about otherwise, from simple lapels, to epaulettes, aiguillettes, flashings, languets. From who Lord Raglan was to what that weird flat bag that hung down off a cavalry man's belt was for. I've probably forgotten 95% of what I knew when I was 14!
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3,457 posts
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Post by LeoThunder on Feb 14, 2019 13:24:39 GMT
Maybe you can put your feet up on one of your cheap cushions and listen to this This is most surprising, I didn't know of Hauer. It is a common occurrence to see variations of a similar invention appear at the same time, not because one inventor copied the other but simply because their environment made the inventions both desirable and possible. Listening to Nomos right now, it sounds very different from Schönberg's work. I suppose combining hexachords leads to a very different outcome. This music is way more approachable than Schönberg's serial stuff or even than his atonal works. Erwartung remains the very definition of a musical nightmare to me. I guess this is why Schönberg's name came out on top. He was the more radical.
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3,457 posts
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Post by LeoThunder on Feb 14, 2019 13:47:20 GMT
I always used to find Tom and Jerry cartoons to be full of quite radical atonal music. Along with some Disney. Bambi is an incredibly depressing thing to listen to. I never paid attention to that. Examples, please !!!
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Post by blindwilly3fingers on Feb 14, 2019 13:56:59 GMT
I don't know but I would presume the kids learn similar from the games. Albeit modern warfare history such as "Nam" and the recent Middle East wars/conflicts. Unfortunately a lot of people think that Lord Raglan is just the name of the boozer they drink in. Unfortunately hollywood also rewrites a lot of historical fact into fiction. I like a good story/film but not when the truth is bent to fit a more dubious narrative. Much like the 70's myth that everything made in Japan was crap. Easy to ignore their historical sword making and woodworking expertise or the fact they built the biggest and most powerful Battleship ever to sail. It's quite ironic the Chinese now have that unfortunate tag.
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3,968 posts
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Post by salteedog on Feb 14, 2019 13:58:22 GMT
I take it none of you guys were one of the millions of people whop attended the Marshmello concert a couple of weeks ago.
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