Ok guys let’s talk music… who here is versed in music?
I was thinking that the boom or bang of the audio files mark a rhythm, and together form a percussion beat (drum beat if you will). However, I’m not sure what beat or rhythm that would be… it certainly doesn’t fit anything I recognize (it’s not like you have a bassdrum, a snare and a high-hat at convenient positions)…
but if the single-pulse, double-pulse and tripple-pulse all corresponded to different percussion instruments, could there be something recognisable in terms of a rhythm or a beat?
On a side note, I found this report dated 2016-07-07 concerning the SJ 16-20 (NORAD 41634). Maybe this was the date that “the unknowns” started messing around with it?
I asked this question awhile back. What is the time signature of the song in the video? We had repeating patterns in the sound, clips of 7 and 4 beats. Could the time signature of the song be 7/4?
The reason I ask is because the song in the video is very repetitive, and we had two sound clips repeating, and Emily kept repeating the same verse from the song in her messages. There must be a link.
I almost ended up studying music in a prior life and worked as a drum teacher for several years. I’ll take a listen and do some counting when I get home from work. I kind of did already, but only with some of the short files, as there did seem to be a steady time to the background hum. I couldn’t really fit the booms into a pattern and stopped, though. But it might change if I chain them up a bit.
The major issue though is that there’s stops in between. At some points the sound was cut, and there’s not really a smooth progression.
The files we’re being given now are exactly the same as the ones we got the first time round. But this time they’re being released in the opposite order. So we started off a 1, and worked our way up to 27. Now we’re working our way back down again. The last one I grabbed, about 10 minutes ago, was number 16, i0isq42s45xolz4aqqvgat54tmhxzm.mp4
@Moderno@kliktrak and others… here are the first two sound files heavily sped up (from 27s down to 3s), noise filtered out and keeping only the pulses which now sounds more like a dry snare drum in a Beatle’esque Sgt Pepper experiment
… and keep in mind that the “file 1 and 2 together” clip was repeated 12 times, plus one more file 1 at the end, to make 25 transmitted audios altogether…
I was looking at fib fractions earlier. They almost look like the bit at the start of sheet music, which tells you what the beat of the music should be.
@Polyphemus This is actually very interesting… it might suggest that the entire structure of what we’re trying to decode isn’t given to us yet… who knows, maybe the same set of 27 files will be transmitted to us according to some grander pattern that we simply cannot see yet?
@Polyphemus how do you know it’s counting down though? it’s number 16 right now… we should check the next time to make sure (if the number is higher or lower?)