I used it to notate the rhythms in the second version of They Took the Children Away or whatever it was called. Just the vibraphone ostinato and snare/kick rhythm. Do they normally provide it??
lol I was the same! All I could think of was the Jungle Book hahaha.hahaha i laughed a LOT at the guy's pronunciation..
he sounded SO much like a robot at the end lol
:]
i loved the last song!
all i could think of was dancing monkeys! hahahaha
just as a side note, how many people actually used the manuscript paper? i used it today for the first time, just to notate out that little keyboard ostinato in that comparative one with the art orchestra.
I normally just wrote them on the lines provided, though granted I only notated rhythms.I don't know. I'd say they would. Or else where could people write out rhythm notations or melodies?
Of course not, it was hardly mixed into a .wav master track in the 1100s. But the name of the performing artist and the recognisable instrumentation used implies kazoo would be an unlikely choice. It did sound like one though...waittttttt a minuteeee sure you say its a medieval piece but that doesn't nessicarily mean it was recorded with medival instruments
Was this the guy who was also doing the 'bap bap bup', 'blah de blah' backing vocal type thing in the really gravelly sort of voice?Okay you know that scary screechy laugh thing in there? What the hell was it? I just put "scary screechy laugh" :S
The scat? Yeah I think it might have been the same guy, though then again it may have been the main vocalist as well.Was this the guy who was also doing the 'bap bap bup', 'blah de blah' backing vocal type thing in the really gravelly sort of voice?