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The Traditional Tune Archive (TTA) is the searchable digital library of traditional music from Ireland, Great Britain and North America organized alphabetically, by tune title, with alternate or additional titles and variants cross-referenced, music in standard and ABC notation, annotated information on history and context, along with references and internet links for further reference.
The first to mention the comma's proportion of 531441:524288 was Euclid, who takes as a basis the whole tone of Pythagorean tuning with the ratio of 9:8, the octave with the ratio of 2:1, and a number A = 262144. He concludes that raising this number by six whole tones yields a value, G, that is larger than that yielded by raising it by an ...
In musical tuning theory, a Pythagorean interval is a musical interval with a frequency ratio equal to a power of two divided by a power of three, or vice versa. [1] For instance, the perfect fifth with ratio 3/2 (equivalent to 3 1 / 2 1) and the perfect fourth with ratio 4/3 (equivalent to 2 2 / 3 1) are Pythagorean intervals.
The plain bob pattern can be extended beyond the constraints of the plain course, to the full unique 720 changes possible ( this is factorial 6 on 6 bells, which is 1×2×3×4×5×6 = 720 changes). To do this, at set points in the sequences one of the ringers, called the "conductor" calls out commands such as "bob" or "single", which introduce ...
Linda Ronstadt - What's New (1983) [2] Dakota Staton; Marlena Studer; Aretha Franklin (1969) on her Soul '69 LP. [3] Gal Costa recorded a Portuguese version, "Louca Me Chamam" included in "Caras E Bocas" album, 1977, with lyrics by Augusto De Campos. As "Crazy She Calls Me", it has also been recorded by: Nat King Cole; Tony Bennett; Sam Cooke ...
It originated as a Bob Wills fiddle tune and was so popular at shows that Wills and singer Tommy Duncan added words and recorded it in early 1941. [ 4 ] Musically, the song has been described as a "jubilant Western Swing romp", [ 4 ] with Wills urging fiddler Louis Tireney to "turn it on boy, turn it on" half way through the song.
The track "New Dawn Fades" is only a part of the original song, and which fades into the next track. The track "God Moving Over the Face of the Waters" is slightly different from the version used in the film, the version on the score is from Moby's album Everything Is Wrong and the version in the film appears later on his 1997 album I Like to Score; Goldenthal composed and arranged the Kronos ...
"New Spanish Two Step" is a Western swing standard based on a traditional fiddle tune, "Spanish Two Step". [2] Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys recorded the latter on September 23, 1935, and released it on Vocalion 03230 in 1936. [ 3 ]