April 14, 2012

More Musical Codes Found In famous Artworks

After some investigate I found that this is not the only instance of finding musical codes in art. Here are some other instances not publicized but just as important:

Artist, Benito Pastability, a sculptor, has found evidence of another musical piece based on Rodin's "The Thinker." He has diagrammed a musical score from the various points of the model and played them on a synthesizer. "It sounds a lot like Boy George from Culture Club," he commented, humming the tune "Where Did Our Love Go."

In another associated amelioration Michelangelo's allinclusive painting on the Sistine Chapel ceiling was analyzed and a computer programmer from Austria, Hans Zimmerfish, has come up with more underground musical codes. Zimmerfish explains that he spent 12 years toiling and has come up with a 30 second score that mimics exactly Edwin Starr's "War, What Is It Good For?" "The phrase, 'absolutely nothin, say it again,' can be heard over and over distinctly," commented Zimmerfish.




The infamous "Noah's Ark" painting by Edward Hicks has thoroughly established a musical pattern by Alfred Aquatic of Auckland, New Zealand. "It is without a doubt the most breathtaking of all the discoveries as even though the painting was done in 1840's if turned upside down and slightly angled to the right, shows a rudimentary musical scoring of James Cameron's gigantic theme, "My Heart Will Go On," but the more expected discovery is that when it is tilted to the left produces "There's Got To Be A Morning After" the theme to the original "Poseidon Adventure," by Maureen McGovern.

In Bivalve, New Jersey a researcher has duplicated all the exact cuts for the points of the infamous "Hope Diamond" and using a convention computer agenda has uncovered another musical mystery. It seems when David Diablo had spun the solitaire simulation counterclockwise at exactly 33.3 Rpm, he recorded something that one can hear the as the words "I Bury Paul." His investigate ended when he mysteriously "got blisters on his fingers" and fell off a calliope to his death.

And lastly, Yuri Dickulous from an unknown hamlet in Republic of Kazakhstan has discovered that "Whistler's Mother," that paramount painting by James Whistler was encoded with what he describes as a melody that exactly duplicates the theme from the movie "Deliverance." additional investigate showed James had an explorer brother named Louis, an avid canoist.

More Musical Codes Found In famous Artworks

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