Next Episode info
News Interviews Galleries Discussion

December 19, 04:08 PM


The playwright William Congreve said that "music has charms to soothe a savage breast. To soften rocks or bend a knotted oak." I myself was once tamed a long time ago. My favorite things are still in this past even as I'm being drawn to the present.


Show me you understand the things I hold dear...


iv7, V7(#5), i7, vii7 III7, VI7, III7(#5), i7, VII7, iv7, i7


iv7,V7(#5), i7, vii7 III7, VI7, V7(#5), i7, II7, v7, i7

COMMENTS

Pages:     1  | 2 |  3  |  4  |  5  |  6  |  7  |  8  |  9 

I realize this is late in the thread ... but is it notable to anyone that the Congreve quote is the opening quote of a play, wherein the closing quote of the play is the famous "Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned?" Sounds very angela-ish.

in response to the last post, could that again, somehow be a reference to Hana's grandmother/Drucker's mother?

Looking at this, G, A, D, C#, F, Bb, A, D, E, A,D.

I presume that it is trying to say JESSICA DEAD? cause jessica has 7 letters.

Maybe he isnt drucker at all, if you check hana's blog there is a new chat with micah in the corinthian page, an strange interference is there and the "noise" is in hana's blog, there is a message there, maybe this message is from him, the other that possibly has the same power that hana has

Dude, they're not individual notes, they're chords.

Here's the progression.
iv7, V7(#5), i7, vii7 III7, VI7, III7(#5), i7, VII7, iv7, i7

iv7,V7(#5), i7, vii7 III7, VI7, V7(#5), i7, II7, v7, i7

Now, you gave the notes, in the key of D minor, as:

G, A, D, C, F, Bb, F, D, C, G,D
G, A, D, C, F, Bb, A, D, E, A,D

To make this simple, let's just use the natural scale for this, so it's C natural.

Also, referring back to the Roman Numerals, some are small, and some are large, indicating major and minor.

So we have, if they were chords:

Gm7, A7(#5), Dm7, Cm7, F7, Bb7, F7(#5), Dm7, C7, Gm7, Dm7

Gm7, A7(#5), Dm7, Cm7, F7, Bb7, A7(#5), Dm7, E7, Am7, Dm7

It's possible that the notes in the chords all come out as an anagram. Or they're meant to be viewed like this:

For example (first 4 chords)
G, A, D, C
Bb, C#, F#, Eb
D, E#, A, G
F, G, C#, Bb

I don't know how to solve it, but this is what I belive it must mean. It's probably a code. I think we should be rewarded for this, if we solve it. Look at the line before he posts the progression. So let's get cracking folks.

Being an English Major I know that code. if memory serves me correctly that is the correct way to site the act and the line number of plays. for example: Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet has 5 acts.or more properly labelled with the roman numeral for 5 which is V. So if I wanted to reference Act 3 scene 2 line 1 I would write: III ii 1. Sometimes it can be refenced as III1 or V7. depending on the play. My guess is you are looking for the acts and the lines in the play whoever wrote this is referencing.

If the above is true, then what would the (#5) be referencing?

To the English major, I've never seen citings like that with a (#5), sharp fifth.

They're chords.

The founders took away the one he loved either by killing her or turning her against him. This is why he hates the founders.

The #5s could be referring to specific words on those lines if it was the play idea? The music notes make more sense, though.

Post Your Comments Here

         
  Name: Remember  
  Email: Personal Info?  
  URL:  
  Comments:    
Small print: All html tags except [b] and [i] will be removed from your comment. You can make links by just typing the url or mail-address.


Categories
Archive
\"\"
\"\"
\"\"
\"\"

NBC Contact Privacy Advertise