Just wanted to say that I love you all for going this in-depth.
I personally don't care and am happy to wait and find out in a couple of weeks what this all means, but it warms the cockles of my heart to know that there are folks who will analyze things in such, such depth! Cheers!
Jawaese is spoken by the Jawas of Tatooine. The first listen we got of this language was in Star Wars, Episode IV: A New Hope. Ben Burtt developed this language for the Star Wars saga. He was drawn to several African languages, in particular Zulu. Recording several individuals who spoke Zulu, Burtt wrote a script patterned on the various sounds he heard and had actors re-voice them for the films. The “recordings were sped up to raise the pitch and accelerate the flow of words” to give us the Jawa language that we are familiar with today
For once being a music composer actually comes in handy for once. So...
The instrument sound is "Synth Square" which is obviously a synthesized sound (electronic).
There are 6 notes in total used. BCDEFG which puts it in the key of C. It never uses A.
Depending on who designs the piano, or who you talk to, the notes are either B2, C3, D3, E3, F3 and G3. Or B3, C4, D4, E4, F4, and G4. Basically it starts on the middle C of a piano. Some people designate middle C as C3 or C4. C3 would be a reference to C-3PO if it is, C4 is a plastic explosive.
These are the 6 notes on the musical staff used.
I think there's a pattern of like a 30-40 second phrase, followed by the lowest note B played multiple times in a row. That B plays more times in a row each phrase. I think, it's hard to tell
The phrase itself is similar but the notes become randomized to an extent. It would take a while to actually write it out each phrase... I don't got that time.
That's all I got so far.
I'm converting it to an MP3 to put into Audacity (audio editor) and play around with in faster or reverse.
Edit: There's nothing significant in reverse or sped up.
Replies
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1M1nD3fl442QblDDRi2ABEGoE7Ck9P1kx0WwXbyWI2j8/edit?usp=sharing
It looks like hexadecimal, with an additional X character.
Thats the answer to last weeks sudoku
No. 12/14 is the date that gave me the decryption key for the cipher. I don't know why you would want the 12 to 14 minute section.
Self-quoting - it looks like it can be split up into [digits] x [6 digit hexadecimal string]. Not sure how to proceed with that.
I personally don't care and am happy to wait and find out in a couple of weeks what this all means, but it warms the cockles of my heart to know that there are folks who will analyze things in such, such depth! Cheers!
This in 'C'
.....
C3P0 confirmed.
The end.
The instrument sound is "Synth Square" which is obviously a synthesized sound (electronic).
There are 6 notes in total used. BCDEFG which puts it in the key of C. It never uses A.
Depending on who designs the piano, or who you talk to, the notes are either B2, C3, D3, E3, F3 and G3. Or B3, C4, D4, E4, F4, and G4. Basically it starts on the middle C of a piano. Some people designate middle C as C3 or C4. C3 would be a reference to C-3PO if it is, C4 is a plastic explosive.
These are the 6 notes on the musical staff used.
I think there's a pattern of like a 30-40 second phrase, followed by the lowest note B played multiple times in a row. That B plays more times in a row each phrase. I think, it's hard to tell
The phrase itself is similar but the notes become randomized to an extent. It would take a while to actually write it out each phrase... I don't got that time.
That's all I got so far.
I'm converting it to an MP3 to put into Audacity (audio editor) and play around with in faster or reverse.
Edit: There's nothing significant in reverse or sped up.
Yeah, it's basically this.
Here's my partial image, with the first dozen or so rows completely filled in, and the background filled in for the rest:
Here's what I'm pretty sure is the source image (a cross-stitch) that fits the colors:
I don't have the time to finish everything myself, but I'm fairly confident it matches.
In the interest of showing my work, here's the google sheet I used to translate the solfa cipher and component parts: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1s4Ayz2p62Rui-dpdqmN-Kwmuk3KB0_mXwRhjqGAEwo4/edit?usp=sharing
LOL @ zero interest. This was the best hypothesis for sure!
@CG_SBCrumb, what’s the official time? Sounds like that $1 is yours.
Guess y’all don’t need this any more...
@CG_SBCrumb looks like we have a winner
Nicely done!!