Brazilian Rhyme: Difference between revisions

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* Brazilian Rhyme cannot be found on any beatmania IIDX soundtrack.
* Brazilian Rhyme cannot be found on any beatmania IIDX soundtrack.


== Music Production Notes ==
== Song Production Information==


=== [[Takayuki Ishikawa|dj TAKA]] ===
=== [[Takayuki Ishikawa|dj TAKA]] ===
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When you first hear this song, it might give you goosebumps. The jazzy classical piano sound of Satoru Shionoya is combined together with Satoshi Tomiie's house music to make a very exquisite song. To not ruin such a good song, I aimed for the finest finishing point in the limited space for songs we have. Also, if the player misses during the song, you'll see something interesting happen.
When you first hear this song, it might give you goosebumps. The jazzy classical piano sound of Satoru Shionoya is combined together with Satoshi Tomiie's house music to make a very exquisite song. To not ruin such a good song, I aimed for the finest finishing point in the limited space for songs we have. Also, if the player misses during the song, you'll see something interesting happen.


== Video Production Notes ==
== Video Production Information==


Currently not available.  
Currently not available.  

Revision as of 07:14, 15 November 2014

Brazilian Rhyme

Song Information

Artist: Satoru Shionoya + Satoshi Tomiie
BPM: 110
Length: 1:59
Genre: HOUSE
VJ: None
First Music Game Appearance: beatmania IIDX 2nd style
Other Music Game Appearances: None

Lyrics

Can you feel my love?
Can you see the flames?

Song Connections/Remixes

  • Brazilian Rhyme is a house cover of the original Brazilian Rhyme, originally written by Earth, Wind, and Fire in 1977.
  • Brazilian Rhyme is a mixture of two different songs - Brazilian Rhyme (The Anthem - remixed by Satoshi Tomiie), credited to Satoru Shionoya feat. Harumi Tsuyuzaki, and Satoru's Saltstrumental mix, combining the vocals of the former with the music from the latter.
  • A different cut of Brazilian Rhyme, Brazilian Rhyme [House Mix], appears on Satoru Shionoya's 1997 album, SALT III.

Trivia

  • According to the manuals for DanceDanceRevolution KONAMIX and DDRMAX: DanceDanceRevolution, Satoshi Tomiie is one of dj TAKA's favorite music producers. This might be the reason why Brazilian Rhyme was around until beatmania IIDX 5th style, while every other license introduced in 2nd style was removed by 4th style.
  • The salt shaker miss overlay in Brazilian Rhyme is a reference to Satoru Shionoya's 1997 album, SALT III.
  • Brazilian Rhyme cannot be found on any beatmania IIDX soundtrack.

Song Production Information

dj TAKA

When you first hear this song, it might give you goosebumps. The jazzy classical piano sound of Satoru Shionoya is combined together with Satoshi Tomiie's house music to make a very exquisite song. To not ruin such a good song, I aimed for the finest finishing point in the limited space for songs we have. Also, if the player misses during the song, you'll see something interesting happen.

Video Production Information

Currently not available.

Difficulty & Notecounts

beatmania IIDX difficulty rated from 1 to 6 in 2nd style, and 1 to 7 through 5th style.

Game SP Difficulty DP Difficulty
Beginner Normal Hyper Another Normal Hyper Another
Notecounts - 426 525 - 479 693 -
beatmania IIDX 2nd style - - 5 - - 5 -
beatmania IIDX 3rd style→4th style - 4 5 - 4 5 -
beatmania IIDX 5th style - 4 5 - ↑5 ↑7 -
beatmania IIDX 3rd style CS - 4 5 - 4 5 -
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