English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

The church is dark. It's Thursday night, not Sunday morning. Who's doing this to me? I can't even hear Emmerdale. Ding bl**dy dong.

2006-11-16 06:25:36 · 7 answers · asked by Musicol 4 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

Rhapsody - wow, nice name. In my head. Resoun'ding'.

2006-11-16 06:37:21 · update #1

Imp - the bells are gonna last til Christmas? Nnnnoooooooooo

2006-11-16 06:38:28 · update #2

asanewt - I can't buy a house. I gave all my money to the local church. What do you think they did with it?

2006-11-16 07:09:25 · update #3

David C - genuinely interesting. But they stopped as I was reading your answer. I think they're teasing me.

2006-11-16 07:14:04 · update #4

7 answers

I can't hear anything, maybe it's all in your head

2006-11-16 06:28:03 · answer #1 · answered by Rhapsody 5 · 1 0

I don't know where you are, but the evil buggers behind the bells - your phantom bell-ringers are probably trying to raise money for the maintenance of the bells in the church. You should be happy to help those fun-loving campanologists keep their ding-a-lings in proper, working order.

Bells in most English Towers are large; ranging in weight from a few hundred pounds to several tons and, like many things in life, are referred to in the feminine gender.
A ring of bells will usually consist of four to twelve bronze bells.
A bell in her usual resting position is 'rung down' and is free to swing gently in the breeze without sounding.

Bells for change ringing are hung in stout frames that allow the bells to swing through 360 degrees. Each bell is attached to a wooden wheel with a handmade rope running around it. The mechanism achieves such exquisite balance that ten-year-olds and octogenarians can control the largest bell easily. The same bell hanging stationary cannot match the harmonic richness of a swinging bell, but each swinging bell requires one ringer's full attention.
The bells are arranged in the frame so their ropes hang in a circle in the ringing chamber below. Into each rope is woven a tuft of brightly coloured wool (sally), which marks where the ringer must catch the rope while ringing. Bells are rung from the "mouth up" position. With a pull of the rope, the bell swings through a full circle to the "up" position again. With the next pull it swings back in the other direction.

The Science

Because of their great momentum, bells take about two seconds to rotate, so they cannot be used to play ordinary "melodic" music. But they can be made to follow one another in order, each ringing once before the first rings again. Ringing bells in a precise relationship to one another is the essence of change ringing. Rung in the order from the lightest, highest pitched bell to the heaviest, the bells strike in a sequence known as rounds, which ringers denote by a row of numbers:

However, it may help you, as a non-ringer to enjoy change ringing if you know what to listen for.
First, the rhythm should not vary from row to row. The rhythm provides the steady framework within which the complex changes are heard. Listen for two rows rung in precise tempo, followed by a pause equal to the stroke of one bell, followed by two more rows and so on. The pause will help you determine which bell rings first. Second, listen for the bell that strikes the lowest note. This is the tenor. Sometimes it always strikes last, even when the other bells are changing. Listen for the highest bell, the treble, as it makes its way through the rows. Listen also for the rows in which large bells alternate with small bells throughout the row. These are considered particularly musical, and composers strive to include as many such rows as possible.

alternatively get a set of headphones and listen to silly emerdale in peace whilst the rest of the world enjoys the ding dongs lol

2006-11-16 07:08:42 · answer #2 · answered by DAVID C 6 · 2 0

OMG Lmao My daughter and that i are nonetheless rollin about it i replaced into giggling and then scrolled down and browse "burning" remark and laughed so problematic I cried and had to bypass my drink off earlier it were given spilled thanks for the laughs adult males

2016-11-24 22:51:03 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

If the spirit aint moving you find an estate agent .

2006-11-16 06:53:40 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

TWAS THE BELLS WOT MADE YOU DEAF

2006-11-16 06:38:34 · answer #5 · answered by : 6 · 2 0

oh it´s christmas time!!!! jingle bells jingle bells jingle all the way,....... tuururururur hey!

2006-11-16 06:34:21 · answer #6 · answered by whothatBE 4 · 1 0

oh stop moaning!!

2006-11-16 06:29:55 · answer #7 · answered by red devil 3 · 1 1

fedest.com, questions and answers