Fino a The Swiss Federal Railways utilizza melodie vibrafono negli annunci basati sui suoi acronimi in lingua nazionale svizzera: SBB (E ♭ -b ♭ -b ♭) tedesco, CFF (CFF) francese e FFS (FFE ♭) italiano. La melodia e la lingua variano in base al cantone o al paese in cui si trova il treno.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swiss_Federal_Railways

    di BezugssystemCH1903

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    3 commenti

    1. BezugssystemCH1903 on

      More detailed explanation:

      >Since 2002, SBB has used music in train announcements. The notes in the music correspond to the acronyms SBB CFF FFS, transposed by means of the German notes “Es – B – B” (E♭, B♭, B♭), “C – F – F” (C, F, F) and “F – F – Es” (F, F, E♭). For the German acronym, as there is no “S” note, the “Es” was used. And for the last letter, it is the B♭/G♭ chord that is played. The melody is played on a vibraphone.[29] The melody played depends on which canton (or country onboard international services) the station or train is located in, and manual announcements play the three-language melody in the file above.

      [Audio Sound](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:SBB_Historic_-_AV_TON_1416-04_-_Tonfolge_SBB_-_Ausschnitt_aus_Radiospot_neuer_Fahrplan.wav)

    2. ThatKuki on

      in the sbb app, make an impossible connection, like Züri HB -> Züri HB, an error message with a picture of a train attendant comes up, harrass them with a bunch of taps, and boom, you get a jumping game

      that game has a music i haven’t heard anywhere else, it features all three sbb cff ffs jingles

    3. Anouchavan on

      Holy shit I never noticed they were different but now it’s obvious.

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