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A military march for Snares, Field Drums and Bass Drums. The army is marching to war. Good for a civil war scene.
Uptempo country track with electric and steel guitar top lines, and a ska like double time rhythm. Great for western or animation.
Exciting, fresh electro swing with contrabass and numerous vocal and big band sequences. Groovy and enthusiastic! Perfect for lifestyle, dance, party, fashion and advertising!
An exotic, swaying, acoustic chillout track. With a very slight latin feel, this track is all about summer, holiday, relaxation, romance, silky smooth beaches and long, hot nights. Very tasteful, and excellent for travel, holiday or good times.
A dark and ominous piece with heavy use of the Taiko drum and japanese, chinese Gong. No melody, all percussion. Martial Arts, Japanese triads, dark, foreboding, military, historical, impending battle. Chase scene, etc.
Electric guitars and exotic percussion fused with traditional orchestral sounds evoke a dark, intense mood of heightened suspense in this rhythmically driving soundtrack. Good for scenes depicting urgent danger, challenge or risk.
A lone piano line signals the entrance of monster grungey guitar riffs, bludgeoning you mercilessly from the outset. Queen-esque lead lines join in before the chorus blazes into life with powerful and emotive strings overlaying the gargantuan guitars. A powerful and intense brew.
Building, Progressive, Confident
The piece is based on a theme from the last movement of the 2nd Violin Concerto in B minor by violinist Niccolò Paganini, a rondo in which the harmonies are supported by the ringing of a hand bell. Liszt had already used the theme for piano in his Variations Grande Fantaisie de Bravoure sur 'La Clochette' de Paganini in B minor. He then reworked the piece in the third etude of the 12 Études d'exécution transcendante in A flat minor. The final version of the Grandes Etudes de Paganin is written in G sharp minor. It is now the most popular and frequently played version. The etude is played at Allegretto and is basically a sequence of different finger exercises for the right hand. At the beginning there are huge staccato jumps of the right hand for which the piece is notorious. This is followed by exercises for the tension of the right hand , octave finger change exercises, trills, runs with almost exclusive participation of the weaker fingers, ascending sequences of fourth sex chords and finally chromatic octave runs. Since the difficulties are limited to the right hand, the piece is not as difficult for large, trained hands as it is commonly portrayed.