Chorus of Calamari County: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Splatoon Sunken Scroll 23.png|center|thumb|505x505px|The sheet music that has the notation of the [[Calamari Inkantation]] in it. This sheet music can also apply to the ''Chorus of Calamari County.'']]
[[File:Splatoon Sunken Scroll 23.png|center|thumb|505x505px|The sheet music that has the notation of the [[Calamari Inkantation]] in it. This sheet music can also apply to the ''Chorus of Calamari County.'']]
 
[[File:Calamari inkantation choreography english.png|thumb|Diagram showing the [[Gachi Bon Matsuri]] dance choreography to the song.]]
[[File:Chorus of Calamari County Bon dance.jpg|center|thumb|505px|Diagram showing the [[Gachi Bon Matsuri]] dance choreography to the song.]]


==Samples and interpolations==
==Samples and interpolations==

Revision as of 09:29, 8 April 2023

Chorus of Calamari County
Artist Squid Sisters
Vocals keity.pop
Mari Kikuma
Callie (in-game)
Marie (in-game)
Game Splatoon 2
Heard in
Splatoon 2
Skipper Pavilion in Recon mode during Splatfest
Album Splatune
Track list no. 35 (Splatune Disc 2)
Genre Japanese folk
Key signature E♭ minor
Length 1:38
Audio file

Chorus of Calamari County, also known as Calamari Shanty in the European version, is a folk-song preformed by the Squid Sisters in the first annual Youth Folk-Singing contest. This song rose them to fame because it caught the eye of committee member Shy-Ho-Shy and helped them arrive in Inkopolis. Contrary to popular belief, the Squid Sisters actually did not compose this song; in actuality, it predates Splatoon's history. It is danced during Gachi Bon Matsuri.

Description

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This article or section is incomplete or is missing information.
You can help the wiki by filling in the blanks.
Reason: Missing information about the localized English page from the Splatoon 2 artbook.

Chorus of Calamari County starts with a taiko drum playing a slow and steady beat. Next, a Koto, a Japanese guitar, joins in and plays the melody heard in the Calamari Inkantation cover. After that, a shakuhachi, a Japanese flute, gets mixed in and plays the melody of Chorus of Calamari County, which bears resemblance to the future cover. Later, the chorus starts singing the melody the koto plays. Traditional Japanese folk song sound effects are played during the song.

File:Splatoon Sunken Scroll 23.png
The sheet music that has the notation of the Calamari Inkantation in it. This sheet music can also apply to the Chorus of Calamari County.
Diagram showing the Gachi Bon Matsuri dance choreography to the song.

Samples and interpolations

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This section is a stub.
You can help the wiki by adding to it.

Wave Goodbye

Main article: Wave Goodbye

Trivia

  • In the song, waves crashing and talking ambience can be heard. This means the song was possibly recorded in a beach. This also means this probably isn't the original Chorus of Calamari County played in the 1st annual Youth Folk-Singing contest.

Etymology

  • The "Chorus" part of the name notes the chorus in the song.
  • The "Calamari County" part of the name notes it was created and first shown in Calamari County, the county where the Squid Sisters are from.

Names in other languages

RotM clean room label 1.png
Translation needed
Add more name translations, specifically Spanish (NOE), German, French (NOA and NOE), Dutch and any other languages this song has been translated into. edit

Template:Foreignname

See also