Frequently Asked Questions...
Pop sheet music for Viola?
OK, i've been looking for sheet music I can print off for free for my viola. But I need songs like Bad Romance since I've heard someone I know play it on the cello and it sounds AWESOME. So...help?
Answer:
You're not likely to find sheet music for current pop songs for viola -- as its just not profitable for most music publishers to transcribe their pop music catalog for a relatively uncommon instrument like viola. The best you can hope for is to find the songs you want published for vocal/piano/guitar, and transcribe it for viola yourself. Or listen to Lady GaGa's recording and figure it out "Bad Romance" for yourself by ear.
And you're DEFINITELY not going to find the songs you want for FREE, as they are covered under copyright. You'll either have to BUY the sheet music, or look for it at your local library.
I suspect that your cello playing friend probably either transcribed "Bad Romance" off of the vocal/piano/guitar sheet music, or learned the song by ear from listening to and playing along with a recording.
Pop Sheet
Baby-Clarinet (With Sheet Music)
Pop Rocks
Pop Rocks is a chocolate delicacy which is composed of sugar, lactose, corn syrup, and some flavoring. It can be distinguished from other solid candies due to its liquefying and fizzling effect in the mouth.
Background and history
Pop Rocks is originally the idea of General Foods research chemist W. A. Mitchell in 1956. But it was first made in 1975. Just about eight year after, the production of the candy was curtly stopped. Rumors asserted this was due to a belief that mixing Pop Rocks together with other carbonated drinks would cause peoples stomach to explode. As an interesting point, the product was pulled out mainly because of its unsuccessful sales and reasonably short expiry life.
In the year 2006, Doctor. Marvin J. Rudolph, leader of the team designated to take Pop Rocks from the laboratory to producing plant, released the historical development of the candy titled : The inside Story of America's Revolutionary Candy, an interview-based book of the production crews as well as the author's.
A quite similar dark chocolate candy, Cosmic Candy which was first called Space Dust, was also produced. Though it is crushed form, the individuality between them we are much the futile.
Producing
Pop Rock is composed by the integration of all of the ingredients and exposing it to high temperature for liquefying purposes, and then allowing to settle the product to a pressurized CO2 gas and letting it cool. This procedure grounds the high pressure fizzes to be ensnared in the candy itself. When mixed with the saliva in the mouth, the candy softens and breaks up, loosing the CO2 ( carbon-dioxide ) from the minute fizzes, ensuing an exploding and blistering noise and parting a minor stinging feeling. Fizzes from the disintegration of the candy can be observed trough a microscopic-aiding instrument.
Urban legend
In the Pop Rocks glory days, believers of the fake info grew demanding that eating the product and mixing carbonated cola could result to the human's stomach explode. The manufacturer sent-out flyers to provide the right info and disprove the claims. Rumors also emphasises that the candy is acidic or basic in nature which when mixed in the mouth, produces an enormous amount of gas, which then goes to the belly to explode. A reported death of Mikey, a kid from the commercial of Life Cereal, had observations in relation to the consumption of Pop Rocks and carbonated drink. To provide for the truth, the actor John Gilchrest, the rumoured dead child was found alive.
With the controversial urban legends, stories have appeared in a number of methods to take a stand for media and fiction purposes. Even in U.S. Television series, the issue of the Pop Rocks mythical legend was proved to be merely a rumor when an experiment was tested with a pig as test subject.
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