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This Reggae track takes a modern look at the genre, mixing in elements of Pop and R&B to create a feelgood, downtempo pop-reggae track. Melodic, catchy, and with a quirky, whistled chorus part later on.
Calm, Heartfelt, Deliberate
An enchanting, atmospheric chamber orchestra piece that is ideal for evoking a magical, romantic ambience. Performed live and written in a style reminiscent of the French Impressionist composers Debussy and Ravel. With woodwinds, strings and harp.
intense, powerful, driven, exciting, atmospheric, explosive, cinematic & highly dramatic modern rock track with strong eastern flavours in it's chords & percussion. spacey, exotic scales combine with big guitars & hefty driven drums. would suit action/thriller/travel/sports projects
Godfather inspired haunting melody evoking a sad and nostalgic, poignant mood. Played on trumpet accompanied by acoustic guitar in waltz time with accordion interweaving a counter-melody. Perfect fit for Italo-American themed productions and more.
Future music for the next Christmas
Muzak Elevator Up Positive Sunny Feelgood Nice Pleasant Joyful Smile Fun Leisure Infomercial Shop Fashion Designer Style Trendy Catwalk Retro Eighties 1980s 80s
The second movement of Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata is a contrast to the first movement. This movement is positive, playful and joyful but yet subdued. Lovely light melodies allow the piece to flow along nicely. The Piano Sonata No. 14 op. 27 no. 2 in C sharp minor by Ludwig van Beethoven, completed in 1801, is also known as the Moonlight Sonata. Beethoven himself gave his work the nickname Sonata quasi una Fantasia ("... quasi a fantasy"). The term "Fantasia" refers to the unusual sequence of movements of the sonata. This explains the untypical tempos of the respective movements for the conventional sonata form. The work does not have a first (fast) movement in sonata form, which sonatas of this period usually contain. It begins with an Adagio, followed by a more lively Allegretto with Trio, followed by a fast, highly dramatic Finale, which has the structure of a sonata-form. What is striking here is that the tempo increases from movement to movement. Franz Liszt characterized the piece by describing the second movement as "a flower between two abysses".
Mysterious jazzy spy tune, featuring a vibraphone, trumpet , bass, strings and drums.
Be there when life is at its best - at a rock concert