So I'm not sure if this is anything, but I found something that sparked my interest about the Reichenbach Fall that came from a common mistake in my spelling.
So today I was working out and watching the Reichenbach Fall and when Sherlock said "Rich Brook in German is Reichenbach. The case that made my name." I got curious on whether or not that was true. My first attempt in typing it out on Translate, I made a typo, accidentally putting Richard Brook, not Rich Brook. The outcome was Richard Bach, and that sounded too familiar to me. It sounded like a name.
So after doing another search, I discovered a writer named Richard Bach, who is 77 years old, and is most popular for his books on philosophy and bestsellers Jonathan Livingston Seagull and Illusions: The Adventures of a Reluctant Messiah and others. After a little more reading, I discovered that he claims to be a direct descendent of Johann Sebastian Bach. This makes me think, what if there's a clue in one of the author's books?
If you don't remember, in the Reichenbach Fall, Johann Sebastian Bach is mentioned twice in the episode. When Jim and Sherlock is having tea after court and on top of the building. I also found out at that one point, Sherlock played a Bach piece in an episode. (I'm not sure which episode, or what piece.)
The binary code rhythm is Partita Number 1, by Bach, as Jim claims.
So this makes me wonder, what's with Johann Sebastian Bach? And why did Jim choose Bach, and not Beethoven or Debussy?