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Weird piano music

The weird piano music includes "Death Waltz", "Croatian Rhapsody", "Black Score", "Melancholy Sunday" and "The Street Where the Wind Lives".

1. "Death Waltz"

The full name of "Death Waltz" is Faerie's Aire and Death Waltz (Faerie's Aire and Death Waltz), written by John Arthur Stump (1944-2006) ) created by. His nephew discovered it among a pile of sheet music after his funeral in 2006.

This piece of music was composed randomly by John Arthur Stump, purely for the beauty of the score. It contains a certain humorous element and cannot be played or performed in the normal way.

2. "Croatian Rhapsody"

"Croatian Rhapsody" comes from the album "The Piano Player" 2003, track number 12, and was composed by composer Tonci Huljic.

"Croatian Rhapsody" performed by Maksim Mrvica, the music uses a bright rhythm to describe the ruins in the ashes of Croatia after being baptized by war, and the tragedy of the setting sun reflected in the blood, tears and dust picture. This song has a passionate and high-pitched melody. It is an emerging famous song in the 21st century and is Maxim's representative work.

3. "Black Music Score"

"Black Music Score" is a manifestation of music score, which appears on "フランドール?Sの楽片を真黑にしてみた" on Niconico The author of a song uses MIDI production software to create a song, usually using a piano as an instrument, using the high frequencies of various tones to represent other instruments, or using some notes to form specific shapes to achieve the purpose of pleasing the song.

It is mainly presented visually, and secondarily through sound. After 2014, multi-instrument black sheet music produced with FL, Cubase, and Domino software began to appear.

4. "Gloomy Sunday"

"Gloomy Sunday" (Hungarian: Szomorú Vasárnap, English: Gloomy Sunday), also translated as "Black Sunday".

Legend has it that it was composed in 1933 by the Hungarian self-taught composer Rezs? Seress (1899-1968). song. The song was originally titled "Vége a Világnak (The End of the World)" and was released as a sheet music.

5. "The Street Where the Wind Lives"

"The Street Where the Wind Lives" is a classic piece collaborated by Yukiko Isomura and the famous Japanese erhu player Masao Sakashita in 2003. "The Street Where the Wind Lives" is a refreshing dialogue between the erhu and the piano. On the whole, the use of the erhu makes the piano slightly redundant. In other words, the appeal of the erhu itself exceeds the piano, and the heavy sadness of the erhu surpasses the piano. romantic.