Well, it has to be consistent, it has to be short, and it has to be repeated. The "Incredible Hulk" television series is a good example. Hulk shows up on screen? Some tuba/bassoon/upright bass will go "Bum-bum-BAAAAAHM-bum." Banner goes hiking down a highway? Cue the piano "bah-daah-da-daaaaah" etc. One of the songs on the Star Wars soundtrack is called "Princess Leia's theme" for a reason.what makes a theme memorable?
But it's been so loooOOOooong!Also if nobody here can hum at least one of the opening themes to HFA2 I'm gonna be severely disconsolate.
Sorry, not me.[DOUBLEPOST=1473798373,1473798332][/DOUBLEPOST]Who did Police Academy?Also if nobody here can hum at least one of the opening themes to HFA2 I'm gonna be severely disconsolate.
A very prolific gentleman named Robert Folk.Sorry, not me.[DOUBLEPOST=1473798373,1473798332][/DOUBLEPOST]Who did Police Academy?
No, no, no, it goes "Dah dada da dah, DAH DAH dah. Dah dada da dah, DAT dadah!"Da dada da DA, da da daaa; da dada da DA, DAT-da-dah!"
(waits for @ThatNickGuy to start singing along...)
I have no idea what tune you're "singing" here."Da dada da DA, da da daaa; da dada da DA, DAT-da-dah!"
(waits for @ThatNickGuy to start singing along...)
...I have no idea what tune you're "singing" here.
That doesn't sound anything like Brisco County Jr.No, no, no, it goes "Dah dada da dah, DAH DAH dah. Dah dada da dah, DAT dadah!
Your response immediately followed a video from Civil War, so I thought it was some kind of a Marvel tune. And I don't understand the context in the first place....
Okay, that's it, turn in the cape.
Chris Reeve is rolling in his grave right now.
You might want to work on your hum-writing, it made no sense to me either and I love that theme.The context was to hum/sing the theme from a memorable movie.
Sent from my Nextbook
I still wouldn't recognize it. Guess I'm not good at reading music written out like this.Better-ish: "Baah dadada baaaah, baahm baahm baahm. Baah dadada baaaah...BAHM ba-daaaah!"
--Patrick
Without meter (or context), it's still difficult to figure out, so don't feel bad.I still wouldn't recognize it. Guess I'm not good at reading music written out like this.
I'm surprised there's only one fortissimo on the "DAT Da daaaah!"My attempt at making it recognizable:
There is the crescendo up from mezzo-piano (and the accented fall), but it only goes up to forte, not fortissimo (fortissimo is "ff"). Gotta save some for later, you know.I'm surprised there's only one fortissimo on the "DAT Da daaaah!"
That's what fortississimo is for.Gotta save some for later, you know.
--Patrick
FTFYThat's what forte fortissimo is for.
You know, I thought it was forte-fortissimo too, but I figured after getting fortissimo mixed up with forte, I better double check, and wikipedia says what I put.FTFY
--Patrick
It's the Spaceballs/Sleeper one that interests me.here's a trailer for Monty Python and the Holy Grail recut to look like a gritty epic action drama.
See, I couldn't even pick out which part was the Cap theme in that. The music they use is that forgettable.Y'know, when I watch MCU movies, I notice that they do use leitmotif a bit. For example, Captain America's theme plays when he does something particularly impressive or heroic:
I will acknowledge that if you asked me to hum Captain America's theme right off the bat, though, I wouldn't be able to do it.
It's the brass fanfare when he's jumping from the car to the truck.See, I couldn't even pick out which part was the Cap theme in that. The music they use is that forgettable.