Display title | Last-Note Nightmare |
Default sort key | Last-Note Nightmare |
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Page ID | 113296 |
Page content language | en - English |
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Page creator | m>Import Bot |
Date of page creation | 21:27, 1 November 2013 |
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Date of latest edit | 01:25, 13 August 2023 |
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Description | Content |
Article description: (description ) This attribute controls the content of the description and og:description elements. | So you're listening to a nice, pleasant song about bunnies and rainbows and running in the rain with your best girl by your side. Then the final note of the song falls and, instead of a nice soft, resolution, it's a heavily played Sting note in a minor Scare Chord. Then the music fades into a series of dissonant arpeggios with a creepy mechanical voice muttering some nonsensical gibberish that sounds like Satan reciting an Edgar Allan Poe story. It's surely not the ending you expected this particular song to have—and if you happen to be really unlucky, it'll burrow into your mind playing itself over and over like some self-regenerating Nightmare Fuel. Musicians most likely put these kinds of stingers at the ends of their songs to make them memorable, (although they'll more than likely just scare people from listening to the song again, or cause them to listen with a finger hovering over the "change track" button during the song's final stretch.) |