Thank you!! No I have not yet transcribed the Common Sparrow. I am at around 35 bird transcriptions for now. Doing more every month and eventually I'll do the Common Sparrow :)
@@AlexanderLiebermann Passer domesticus is quite a bit down the alphabet if I may assume there is a chronology to the proceeding of events ;) Anyway, thank you for putting in the work, it makes me happy as a rockin' robin
1. Uirapuru: Song in Sheet Music 2. Common Cuckoo: Call in Sheet Music 3. Common Nightingale: Song in Sheet Music 4. Butcherbirds: Call in Sheet Music 5. Emperor Penguin: Vocalizations in Sheet Music 6. Great Reed Warbler: Song in Sheet Music 7. Common Peafowl: Song in Sheet Music 8. Thrush Nightingale: Song in Sheet Music 9. Savi's Warbler: Notes and Spectrogram (41 Seconds!) 10. Uguisu: Song in Sheet Music
This is great!....check out Hermeto's harmonisations of bird calls in "Quando as aves se encontram, nasce o som" 92 (When birds meet sound is born) ua-cam.com/video/LWN14vlQ4fI/v-deo.html The guy in that video is replaying note for note Hermeto's version (and did an excellent job transcribing the music). Hermeto calls this "som da aura" (sound of the aura), generally applied to where he melodizes and harmonizes human speech. There's others who do the same thing (like the excellent Harmonizator - www.youtube.com/@vendidou ) but Hermeto is the master of masters at this.
Such beautiful sounds ... transcribed as music. Amazing work and thanks so much for sharing here.🎉😊
Incredible nature brings meaning to our lives. You won't find this peace at your local musical bar
Wow 🎶 You did such an amazing work! A big thank you for making this video, by a classical pianist (and also birdwatcher!) 😊
Dear Giulia, thank you very much for your kind comment. I am working on another one soon!
Beautiful and amazing work!
Thank you!
magnificent-bravo on these wonderful transcriptions!
Always so amazing, loved the maps and all the rest
Great work!
amazing thank you
I already loved the original uploads, but the small fact and the map make great additions!
Have you done one for a Common Sparrow?
2:32 seals the deal for me "(like an old car failing to start") .. that's anything but trivia :)
Thank you!! No I have not yet transcribed the Common Sparrow. I am at around 35 bird transcriptions for now. Doing more every month and eventually I'll do the Common Sparrow :)
@@AlexanderLiebermann Passer domesticus is quite a bit down the alphabet if I may assume there is a chronology to the proceeding of events ;) Anyway, thank you for putting in the work, it makes me happy as a rockin' robin
@@katjasplichal2856 No worries, I'll get to it 😃. Thank you !!
This is awesome - can't believe it has so few views! Sharing.
Thank you!!
amei
Awesome Alexander thanks!!
It's marvellous
Magnifique! Merci !!!
Imagine harmonize it with jazz harmony
Ama~~zing
1. Uirapuru: Song in Sheet Music
2. Common Cuckoo: Call in Sheet Music
3. Common Nightingale: Song in Sheet Music
4. Butcherbirds: Call in Sheet Music
5. Emperor Penguin: Vocalizations in Sheet Music
6. Great Reed Warbler: Song in Sheet Music
7. Common Peafowl: Song in Sheet Music
8. Thrush Nightingale: Song in Sheet Music
9. Savi's Warbler: Notes and Spectrogram (41 Seconds!)
10. Uguisu: Song in Sheet Music
How did you transcribe? Did you use software?
Everything by ear, software to slowdown recording, and a keyboard.
Супер
This is great!....check out Hermeto's harmonisations of bird calls in "Quando as aves se encontram, nasce o som" 92 (When birds meet sound is born) ua-cam.com/video/LWN14vlQ4fI/v-deo.html The guy in that video is replaying note for note Hermeto's version (and did an excellent job transcribing the music). Hermeto calls this "som da aura" (sound of the aura), generally applied to where he melodizes and harmonizes human speech. There's others who do the same thing (like the excellent Harmonizator - www.youtube.com/@vendidou ) but Hermeto is the master of masters at this.
But they don’t sing the same notes as we would transcribe in music they are usuallly in between our notes it’s been studied
That's why I use microtonal indications to show you where the notes deviate from the well-tempered system.