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  1. guys what's the name of the original piece that Salieri Strike's Back adapts https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8BWnyU29PjQ

    Tuesday, 15-Dec-15 03:09:57 UTC from web
    1. @rarity Something by Mozart, I think?

      Tuesday, 15-Dec-15 03:16:37 UTC from web
      1. @noelnarwhal that narrows it down Kappa

        Tuesday, 15-Dec-15 03:19:44 UTC from web
        1. @rarity Well I don't know, according to the album credits the band's keyboard player and one of their guitarists wrote it. I think they're just using baroque chord patterns and scales? It has a very baroque feel to it, but I can't really ascribe it to any specific piece off the top of my head.

          Tuesday, 15-Dec-15 03:22:51 UTC from web
          1. @noelnarwhal I really really feel like it's an actual baroque piece but I might just be hallucinating, I played the opening harpschicord sequence into soundhound and it just gave me the Warmen song

            Tuesday, 15-Dec-15 03:26:02 UTC from web
            1. @rarity It easily could be in an actual baroque piece, or at least parts of it. It definitely uses baroque or baroque inspired phrasing. I can't make any comparisons at the moment though, my knowledge of baroque music is pretty casual beyond my knowledge of baroque theory.

              Tuesday, 15-Dec-15 03:29:52 UTC from web
              1. @noelnarwhal honestly I love Baroque music when I do listen to classical, the harpsichord is underrated

                Tuesday, 15-Dec-15 03:31:03 UTC from web
                1. @rarity I love the harpsichord and baroque music, I just need to get around to listening to more of it aside from the big names like Bach, Vivaldi, Handel, Pachelbel, Telemann, etc. Also now that I think about it Mozart isn't even baroque himself, he's from the Classical era.

                  Tuesday, 15-Dec-15 03:33:48 UTC from web
                  1. @noelnarwhal eh, he was right on the border between them

                    Tuesday, 15-Dec-15 03:37:56 UTC from web
                    1. @rarity He was born roughly right as the baroque era ended and his work would play a huge influence on the Classical era and following Romantic era, so I'd agree

                      Tuesday, 15-Dec-15 03:40:58 UTC from web
    2. @rarity the beginning sounds a lot like La Follia, come to think of it it sort of sounds like an adaptation.

      Tuesday, 15-Dec-15 05:03:28 UTC from web