Ringtones downloaded just now!

- Free My Niggaz
downloaded just now
by SaraFaith1
NCIS Theme
downloaded 1 min ago
by DeniseWynne
Metal_Gear_Solid
downloaded 1 min ago
by archametes
Joan Jett - Bad Reputation
downloaded 1 min ago
by Dux_fan_Scoob
Justin Bieber ringtone
downloaded 3 mins ago
by IvyErtmer1
Your Mom
downloaded 3 mins ago
by JackieTreadway
We Are Young - Glee Cast
downloaded 4 mins ago
by sadiman
Assassin's Creed 2 Viewpoint
downloaded 4 mins ago
by *Darkrose*
Assassins Creed Syncronizat...
downloaded 5 mins ago
by *Darkrose*
With his blood
downloaded 6 mins ago
by *Darkrose*
Transformers TXT
downloaded 7 mins ago
by archametes
whistle
downloaded 7 mins ago
by momo925
-whistle
downloaded 8 mins ago
by momo925
Ls broadcast
downloaded 9 mins ago
by Caitlyn Case
Go Go Power-Rangers
downloaded 9 mins ago
by ecodyana
- Whistle
downloaded 10 mins ago
by momo925
Who Says - Tiffany Alvord M...
downloaded 10 mins ago
by sadiman
hate being sober
downloaded 10 mins ago
by iToxiicatioN
Carolina Panthers Rap
downloaded 11 mins ago
by Tbarkus
Deathnote_L_Theme_B
downloaded 11 mins ago
by Caitlyn Case
Dance of the Sugar-Plum F... 
Rate It (3160)
263280
Save to My Zoo
Send to Phone
Report
Delete

Ringtone Details

Created By: uncle mikey Oct 18, 2007
Artist: Tchaikovsky
Categories: Holiday, Music
Description: From the score of The Nutcracker, completed in 1892 shortly before the composer's death in 1893. The music in Tchaikovsky's ballet is some of the his most popular. The music belongs to the Romantic Period and contains some of his most memorable melodies which are frequently used in television and film. One novelty in Tchaikovsky's original score was the use of the celesta, a new instrument Tchaikovsky had discovered in Paris that the composer had already employed in his much lesser known symphonic poem The Voyevoda (premiered 1891). He wanted it genuinely for the character of the Sugar-Plum Fairy to characterize her because of its "heavenly sweet sound". It appears not only in her "Dance," but also in other passages in Act II.
Tags
Advertisement