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24 Hours Of Beethoven's 9th Symphony

Ermintrude the Flying Cow writes "Ever wonder what "Ode to Joy" would sound like if stretched to 24 hours? Now you can find out. 9 Beet Stretch is the result of running Beethoven's 9th Symphony in a digital stretching program, turning the one hour piece into a 24 hour attention span acid test. Thankfully, for those of us who know our limits, it's been cut into 19 parts."

17 of 348 comments (clear)

  1. This could be as much fun by TerryAtWork · · Score: 5, Funny

    as watching grass grow....

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  2. Ever wonder ? by tmark · · Score: 5, Funny

    Ever wonder what "Ode to Joy" would sound like if stretched to 24 hours?

    Uhh, no ?

    1. Re:Ever wonder ? by Kipper+the+Llama · · Score: 5, Funny

      I did, then the pot wore off.

  3. suicide scherzo by nastro · · Score: 5, Funny

    Yet another way to get little Alex to try to off himself, O my brothers.

  4. 24 seconds. by Trusty+Penfold · · Score: 5, Funny


    It would be better compressed to 24 seconds - the neighbourhood dogs would go apeshit.

  5. It's okay..... by Newer+Guy · · Score: 5, Funny

    But it drags a bit....

  6. Change the freakin name! by AltImage · · Score: 5, Funny

    At 24 hours, I don't think "Ode to Joy" is really appropriate anymore.

    Then again, isn't an ode a song or poem in remembrance to something lost? In that case it may be all too fitting.

  7. timestretching and electronic music by phaxkolumbo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Timestretching has been featured exclusively on electronic music tracks for quite a while now... Just think those drum'n'bass records with the words 'selekta' etc.

    Apparently Aphex Twin once was supposed to remix a track, so he timestretched it to a couple of milliseconds and used it as a snare drum, and when the bloke came back to get the ready remix, he just grabbed a random DAT-tape and gave it back to him...

    One Nine inch nails strack features the words ' erase your head' stretched to the duration of the track (ummh, 5 minutes or so), so you can hear the words if you fast forward the track.

    And this is not even mentioning Autechre (and many others) which these days just live on the digital artifacts caused by timestretching.

    But, still, it's cool to find use for this sort of thing... i wonder what they used to create the 24-h stretch

  8. Next up: 4'33" by John Cage. by Blaede · · Score: 5, Funny

    Oughta be good.

  9. Re:19? by TekReggard · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The reason why they use 19 is related to musical content. If you divided it into 48, or even 24 even pieces, then you might accidentally stop it in the middle of a brilliant musical motion.



    In other words, whoever broke it up into sections was more worried about musical value and meaning, than file size and numerical sense. Think of your favorite piece of music from any genre, you wouldnt want it to, take a break, RIGHT in the middle of your favorite stanza, verse, etc.

  10. Re:strange people by xinit · · Score: 5, Informative
    Apparently the theory behind Empire was that it could be displayed as a piece in a gallery... you could look at it and see an effectively still image. The image changed, of course, but not like you'd expect a MOVIE to.

    So, what the piece was was more of a painting or a photograph with some dynamic content.

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  11. Re:how's the stretch come out? by delfstrom · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's really amazing! I'm listening to section 4.1 right now. It sounds like a complete orchestra making very long, slowly changing notes, such as background music for a movie.

  12. Re:19? by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 5, Funny

    If they were worried about musical value and meaning, they wouldnt have stretched a classical masterpiece horribly out of shape =p

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  13. sssssoooouuuunnndddsss iiiinnnnttteeerreeessstting by Dr.+Awktagon · · Score: 5, Funny

    SSSSSooooouuuuunnnnndddddsssss iiiiinnnnnttttteeeeerrrrreeeeessssstttttiiiiinnnnn ggggg.....

    LLLLLiiiiikkkkkeeeee ttttthhhhheeeee ooooottttthhhhheeeeerrrrr pppppooooosssssttttteeeeerrrrr hhhhheeeeerrrrreeeee,,,,, IIIII wwwwwooooonnnnndddddeeeeerrrrr wwwwwhhhhhaaaaattttt sssssoooooffffftttttwwwwwaaaaarrrrreeeee hhhhheeeee uuuuussssseeeeeddddd..... PPPPPrrrrrooooobbbbbaaaaabbbbblllllyyyyy sssssooooommmmmeeeee sssssooooorrrrrttttt ooooofffff gggggrrrrraaaaannnnnuuuuulllllaaaaarrrrr sssssyyyyynnnnnttttthhhhheeeeesssssiiiiisssss.....

    TTTTThhhhheeeeerrrrreeeee'''''sssss aaaaa cccccoooooooooolllll GGGGGSSSSS ppppprrrrrooooogggggrrrrraaaaammmmm IIIII'''''vvvvveeeee ppppplllllaaaaayyyyyeeeeeddddd wwwwwiiiiittttthhhhh bbbbbeeeeefffffooooorrrrreeeee cccccaaaaalllllllllleeeeeddddd """""ttttthhhhhOOOOOnnnnnkkkkk""""" .......... yyyyyooooouuuuu fffffeeeeeeeeeeddddd iiiiittttt sssssooooommmmmeeeee sssssooooouuuuunnnnndddddsssss,,,,, wwwwwaaaaaiiiiittttt ooooovvvvveeeeerrrrrnnnnniiiiiggggghhhhhttttt,,,,, aaaaannnnnddddd ttttthhhhheeeeennnnn hhhhhaaaaavvvvveeeee sssssooooommmmmeeeee wwwwwiiiiiccccckkkkkeeeeeddddd dddddrrrrrooooonnnnneeeeesssss iiiiinnnnn ttttthhhhheeeee mmmmmooooorrrrrnnnnniiiiinnnnnggggg..... TTTTThhhhhooooossssseeeee ooooofffff yyyyyooooouuuuu iiiiinnnnnttttteeeeerrrrreeeeesssssttttteeeeeddddd iiiiinnnnn eeeeellllleeeeeccccctttttrrrrrooooonnnnniiiiiccccc sssssooooouuuuunnnnndddddsssss ooooouuuuuggggghhhhhttttt tttttooooo ccccchhhhheeeeeccccckkkkk iiiiittttt ooooouuuuuttttt!!!!!

    (Before you mod down, remember, this is ART.)

  14. Brian Eno by sakusha · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Interesting comparison to Eno and Discrete Music. If you read the liner notes to the original Discrete Music album, Eno talks about how he was laid up in the hospital, immobilized in a cast, when a friend came in and brought a record player with some classical music, he put it on to play and then left. The player was set to 16rpm instead of 33, so he was stuck listening to a slowed down album of Pachelbel's Canons. He said the album seemed to take hours, through his fog of pain and painkillers. He says it gave him the idea for ambient music.

  15. Just a nitpick by selan · · Score: 5, Informative

    "Ode to Joy" is a poem written by Schiller. Beethoven used the poem as the lyrics for the fourth movement of the symphony, which is the choral section and most famous part of the symphony. The symphony also has three other movements, so it's not really accurate to refer to the whole symphony no. 9 as "Ode to Joy."

    </pedantry>

    Phew. Now that's off my chest, you can continue about your business.
  16. PDQ Bach? by wirefarm · · Score: 5, Interesting

    A guy named Peter Schickele (Have no idea of the real spelling. Ok, lemme go google... Wow - I got it right.) a music professor and composer has been 'deriving' compositions, 11 albums' worth, of the mythical son of JS Bach, PDQ Bach.
    Funny stuff, yet very scholarly, in a weird way.

    Anyway, he has a website at pdqbach.com.

    His peices always have great names too, like Music for an Awful Lot of Winds and Percussion and The Short-Tempered Clavier and Other Dysfunctional Works for Keyboard. Worth a listen.

    Cheers,
    Jim

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