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"A normal person sees these birds perched on electrical wires and worries about getting crapped on. Jarbas Agnelli looks at them and sees musical notes. Maybe he's smarter than the rest of us because the melody is utterly oh-so-sweet-that-I-could-doze-off-right-now. Agnel explains... more
Reviewed by Chaotiqual Sep 11, 04:58pm ( 131 reviews ) • gizmodo.com.au
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Rated by emilyinstitches on Nov 23, 3:50pm
very interesting
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Rated by munkeyluvva on Nov 13, 6:23pm
You know, they don't quite fit birds to notes exactly or anything. But the concept is wicked cool.
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Rated by lilaccrayon on Nov 11, 2:58pm
lol
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Rated by behaving-better on Nov 11, 9:07am
Lovely.
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Reviewed by sosh on Nov 09, 1:41am
Yeah, but if you only use the notes on the lines, it will sound ok even randomly. Plus I guess they just made up the note durations.
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Rated by c0rp533f4c3 on Oct 21, 8:48pm
I like it. Even though he obviously had to create the right timing and harmonic backing and supportive music. And it's not like he's gonna have to many clashing notes seeing as how the birds aren't exactly gonna be 'floating' with their bodies halway between, rather than perched on, the lines. It's creative. Edit: and where are the birds to say what key it's in? roffle.
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Reviewed by edwinpeng on Oct 21, 1:18am
didn't PBS used to run a commercial like that 10 years ago?