This is no coincidence.

The musicians have classical education. Rite of Spring is the Pachelbel
Canon of the 20th century and every rock musician has probably heard and
loved it.


Also this one lifted from Bruckner's 5th:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0J2QdDbelmY



On 13.07.19 12:37, Daniel Shoskes wrote:
https://www.classicfm.com/discover-music/queen-we-are-champions-rite-of-spring/



[News from India - please ignore if it does not interest you]


A new interesting discovery I made will probably upset some of you.

I have now evidence that Sikh music can be found in lute sources:

The Ricercar "no. 17" from the Siena Manuscript is a Raga
Dhanaseri/Dhanashri piece.

The same model is also used in "La Spiritata" by Giovanni Gabrieli.


Both mashups can be heard here:

https://soundcloud.com/tristan-von-neumann/siena-manuscript-ricercar-no-17-mode-1-raga-dhanaseri-shaan-prof-surinder-singh

https://soundcloud.com/tristan-von-neumann/giovanni-gabrieli-la-spiritata-raga-dhanashri-ii-better-mix


If you are able to synthesize the two layers, you will notice it.


Why use Sikh models? They were relatively tolerant monotheists -
probably safe to deal with when you are a Jesuit, music transfer is also
easy.

Even today, music is the main expression of Sikh faith.

There are note syllables for smooth communication, most of the concepts
are compatible with European understanding of music, but require adjustment.

The material for this topic requires more pages than I thought (300+).

I'm on it though. Some encouraging words would be great instead of trolling.


[Thank you for your attention.]







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