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Vompatti
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Posted: April 18 2006 at 13:48 |
This is probably a silly question, but is 6/8 the same as 3/4 and 10/8 the same as 5/4 or is there a difference?
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video vertigo
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Posted: April 18 2006 at 16:42 |
no because in 6/8 the eighth note gets the beat and there are 6 per measure, in 3/4 the quarter note gets the beat and there are 3 per measure. They sound pretty much identical and may even look the same written out, but different songs require different signatures. Usually 6/8 is used for faster songs it makes it easier to follow I think.
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"The rock and roll business is pretty absurd, but the world of serious music is much worse." - Zappa
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Barla
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Posted: April 19 2006 at 00:00 |
Vompatti wrote:
This is probably a silly question, but is 6/8 the same as 3/4 and 10/8 the same as 5/4 or is there a difference? |
Mathematically it'd be the same but the tempo is different, so the time signature is different.
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Vompatti
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Posted: April 19 2006 at 05:53 |
video vertigo wrote:
no because in 6/8 the eighth note gets the beat and there are 6 per measure, in 3/4 the quarter note gets the beat and there are 3 per measure. They sound pretty much identical and may even look the same written out, but different songs require different signatures. Usually 6/8 is used for faster songs it makes it easier to follow I think. |
Thanks, I think I got it. But what if there is 1 quarter note and 4 eighth notes, is it 6/8?
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video vertigo
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Posted: April 19 2006 at 18:23 |
Vompatti wrote:
video vertigo wrote:
no because in 6/8 the eighth note gets the beat and there are 6 per measure, in 3/4 the quarter note gets the beat and there are 3 per measure. They sound pretty much identical and may even look the same written out, but different songs require different signatures. Usually 6/8 is used for faster songs it makes it easier to follow I think. |
Thanks, I think I got it. But what if there is 1 quarter note and 4 eighth notes, is it 6/8?
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it could be in 6/8 because an eighth is half of a quarter. 6/8 and 3/4 usually depend more on tempo and what is easier to read with the tempo used.
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"The rock and roll business is pretty absurd, but the world of serious music is much worse." - Zappa
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Igha
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Posted: April 20 2006 at 05:49 |
Very interesting thread! Im learning somethings about music theory
video vertigo wrote:
Vompatti wrote:
video vertigo wrote:
no because in 6/8 the eighth note gets the beat and there are 6 per measure, in 3/4 the quarter note gets the beat and there are 3 per measure. They sound pretty much identical and may even look the same written out, but different songs require different signatures. Usually 6/8 is used for faster songs it makes it easier to follow I think. |
Thanks, I think I got it. But what if there is 1 quarter note and 4 eighth notes, is it 6/8?
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it could be in 6/8 because an eighth is half of a quarter. 6/8 and 3/4 usually depend more on tempo and what is easier to read with the tempo used. |
Can you throw me more light on the relation between tempo and signature? Is it possbile to slightly variate the tempo of a song without altering the signature? I think bands some times do this when they play live.
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My words are spiders upon the page,they spin out faith, hope and reason but are they meet and just, or only dust gathering about my chair?
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video vertigo
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Posted: April 20 2006 at 16:51 |
I'm not 100% sure, but what I remember from high school music, it just made it easier to be in 6/8 with a faster tempo than it would 3/4 but wasn't entirely necessary. Anyone got a good explanation?
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"The rock and roll business is pretty absurd, but the world of serious music is much worse." - Zappa
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UnknownFlow
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Joined: April 06 2006
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Posted: April 25 2006 at 16:15 |
video vertigo wrote:
I'm not 100% sure, but what I remember from
high school music, it just made it easier to be in 6/8 with a faster
tempo than it would 3/4 but wasn't entirely necessary. Anyone got a
good explanation? |
6/8 and 3/4 are different. in 6/8 you basically feel the pulse on beats 1 and 4 so you would count with accents:
ONE-two-three-FOUR-five-six.
In 3/4 there is a pulse only on the first beat of the bar each time and on no other beat, so
it's genrally faster, but not all the time. All waltzes are in 3/4.
As for tempo in relation to the time signature, I think they are both
completely different and are inter changable, except it's easier to
change time signature as a band if the beats are the same speed. And
it's not very easy to change tempo immediatly as a band you'd have to
have some way of counting in, say if you had a brak and got brung back
in by the drummer or something. But i'm sure it's possible if you knew
the parts well enough and were tight enough as a band.
Also another question: whats the hardest time signature anyones come across or is using in their band?
My band is currently working on a Gentle Giant/Dream Theater style
instrumental with some crazy time signatures. The longest time
signature we're using at the moment is 31/16 and i found that easy
because i just wrote it down on a piece of paper and learnt it. It's
hard to do fills with that however but i don't think there is space for
them due to the insane guitar riffs which is lucky.
Edited by UnknownFlow - April 25 2006 at 16:21
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Abstrakt
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Posted: April 26 2006 at 12:39 |
Some Wicked Rhytms:
African music in 6/8
Led Zeppelin's "The Ocean" opening riff 7/8
Led Zeppelin's "The Crunge" 4,5/4 or maybe 12/16
Pink Floyd - Money 7/8
Yes - 3-4 mins into "Close To The Edge" 6/8
Eloy - 4 mins into "Decay Of The Logos" just 4/4, 8/8 or 16/16... but mans what a rhytm!
Led Zeppelin - Opening bars of "Four Sticks" 5/8
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TheLamb
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Posted: April 26 2006 at 12:46 |
I couldn't bother to read the whole thread so Im sorry if someone already worte this but:
Time signatures don't always divide into an equal amount of beats. For instance;
My band has a piece which is partially in 15/8, but But it does not divide symmetrically into 5:5:5, because it has a "polly-rythm" that makes it "divide" into a 6:3:3:3 (beats 1, 7, 10, and 13 are "emphasized")... So to those who said 9/8 always divides into 3:3:3, your utterly wrong!
I'm very sorry if I didn't explain this properrly I have no idea how to explain music concepts and stuff in english..... I hope you understood what I was on about... I'm pretty sure some of the words I used are not even related to music in your language...
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TheLamb
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Posted: April 26 2006 at 13:12 |
Abstrakt wrote:
Some Wicked Rhytms:
African music in 6/8
Led Zeppelin's "The Ocean" opening riff 7/8
Led Zeppelin's "The Crunge" 4,5/4 or maybe 12/16
Pink Floyd - Money 7/8
Yes - 3-4 mins into "Close To The Edge" 6/8
Eloy - 4 mins into "Decay Of The Logos" just 4/4, 8/8 or 16/16... but mans what a rhytm!
Led Zeppelin - Opening bars of "Four Sticks" 5/8 |
a few more wicked rythms, a bit more complex - these are the really brain killers:
Birds of Fire - Mahavishnu Orchestra - 18/8 (Guitar plays 5+5+5+3, and drums and violin make mind blowing polly rythms all over the place)
Hell's Bell's - Bill Bruford - 19/16 (Interesting piece...)
The Crimson Sunrise (ACOS) - Dream Theater - 19/8 (Difficult to count but it's definitly 19/8, theres no other way to think of it)
2116 - Planet X - 21/16 (one of the more pretentious pieces I've ever listened to....)
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UnknownFlow
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Posted: April 26 2006 at 14:53 |
Some Time Signatures that I think sound pretty cool without being over complex or not complex enough.
Watcher Of The Skies - Genesis - 6/4 that sounds bloody cool
Gentle Giant - Pantagruels Nativity (one of the sections) - 11/4
Turn it On Again - Genesis - 13/8
Jacob's Ladder - Rush - numerous time signatures including - 11/8 and 13/16
adn I'm not sure if this is right but I reckon the intro to Changes by Yes in in 9/4.
Edited by UnknownFlow - April 26 2006 at 15:01
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UnknownFlow
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Posted: April 26 2006 at 14:55 |
Yeah my band also has a section in where the guitarists are playing 3
bars of 5/8 and i'm playing 5 bars of 3/8 so it could also be described
as 1 bar of 15/8.
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Empathy
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Posted: April 26 2006 at 15:11 |
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Pure Brilliance:
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Abstrakt
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Posted: April 27 2006 at 13:12 |
TheLamb wrote:
Abstrakt wrote:
Some Wicked Rhytms:
African music in 6/8
Led Zeppelin's "The Ocean" opening riff 7/8
Led Zeppelin's "The Crunge" 4,5/4 or maybe 12/16
Pink Floyd - Money 7/8
Yes - 3-4 mins into "Close To The Edge" 6/8
Eloy - 4 mins into "Decay Of The Logos" just 4/4, 8/8 or 16/16... but mans what a rhytm!
Led Zeppelin - Opening bars of "Four Sticks" 5/8 |
a few more wicked rythms, a bit more complex - these are the really brain killers:
Birds of Fire - Mahavishnu Orchestra - 18/8 (Guitar plays 5+5+5+3, and drums and violin make mind blowing polly rythms all over the place)
Hell's Bell's - Bill Bruford - 19/16 (Interesting piece...)
The Crimson Sunrise (ACOS) - Dream Theater - 19/8 (Difficult to count but it's definitly 19/8, theres no other way to think of it)
2116 - Planet X - 21/16 (one of the more pretentious pieces I've ever listened to....) |
WHOA!!! now thats wierd
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Royalist
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Posted: April 27 2006 at 17:31 |
I'd say: 2/4 means that a BAR includes a strong beat and a weak one: ONE two or > _ . -3/4 means strong,weak, weak ONE two three ( > _ _ ) > strong > less strong _ weak The 1st beat is called downbeat and is usually the hardest one. Other ones can also be graduated in strength but no so stressed as the first. 4/4 is usually > _ > _ The beats don't need to be single notes. 3/4 can be > > _ _ _ _ (ONE TWO three four five six). But a sequence of > _ _ > _ _ would be 6/8. All beats are equal in duration but can be split into any number of smaller parts: 3/4 = 1 . 1 . 1 . 1 . 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 ....................Another kind of 6/8 can be > _ > _ > _ or just > _ _ _ _ _. There are no strict rules. 7/8 can be >_ _ > _ > _. It's not always so simple. We can find meters like > > _ _ _ . It's not practical to say "(2 and a half)/4" so we can say 5/4. In this situation an actual beat consists of 2 or 3 units. Meter can be constant or changing every 5 seconds or br different in every next bar. >>_ _ _ _ > _> _ _ >> _ _ = 3 bars 3/4 + 5/8 + 2/4 A lot of music has random accents everywhere (not only on downbeat) . Sometimes it's difficult or impossible to tell the time signature. So 13/8 is like counting 1 -13 where 1 is strong and the others either weak or "a little strong" . Example: > _ _ > _ _ > _ _ >_ > _ . Maybe we're talking about something like > > > _ _ _ > > > _ _ _ _. , like a bar of 4/4 divided into 12 notes with an extra one. There is no difference between "Money in 7/8" and "Money in 7/4". No one knows if a note is a half note or an 8-note. Money is 7/4, 120 bpm = 7/2, 240 bpm = 7/8, 60 bpm. Bpm value tells how many notes (4-notes) there are in a minute. If _ stands for 8-note, _ _ creates a 4-note but I can decide that _ is a 16- note or whole note etc. The most popular drum pattern of 4/4 is 1. um 2. TSH 3. um 4. TSH find in lots of rock, pop, hiphop etc. As you can see 2 and 4 are stronger here (played on snare drum). It is easy to count. You can tap your fingers against your desk like > _ _ > _ _ > _ _ > _ _ and a lot of music follows it (3/4 or 6/8, it has a feel of "swaying". "We are the champions" is in 6/8). try to count and you'll see how it works. Just practice. Many people here go crazy about meters. They say that 4/4, 3/8 , 6/8 are "common", "simple", and 7, 9, 13, 5 are odd, complex ...They claim that 11/8 is difficult to play just because it is 11/8 . Musicians who play such things gain respect of "virtuosos". Is is wrong!!! Gripping a guitar chord and counting 1 to 17 is easy! 4/4 things can be very difficult!!
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MikeEnRegalia
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Posted: April 27 2006 at 18:02 |
Zoso wrote:
Right, it's all about feeling the rhythm.
Listen to "Money" by Pink Floyd, a song that's in 7/8. Tap your foot along with the bassline, and you'll see that there are 7 beats for every time through the phrase. It will be obvious once you do it.
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Actually, it's 7/4. Simply count 1-2-3-4-1-2-3, or 1-2-1-2-1-2-3.
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Royalist
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Posted: April 28 2006 at 02:04 |
Vompatti wrote:
This is probably a silly question, but is 6/8 the same as 3/4 and 10/8 the same as 5/4 or is there a difference?
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3/4= 1 2 3 1 2 3 1 2 3 1 2 3 one beat of 3 is much stronger 6/4= 1 2 3 1 2 3 1 2 3 1 2 3 one beat of 6 is much stronger 3/8 and 6/8 in the same tempo are 2x faster. 3/8 in tempo 100 = 3/4 in tempo 200. 10 8-notes notes in 5/4 can sound > > _ _ > > _ _ _ _ In 10/8 > _ _ _ _ > _ _ _ _ or > _ _ > _ _ > _ > _ etc.
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Royalist
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Posted: April 28 2006 at 02:23 |
Vompatti wrote:
video vertigo wrote:
no because in 6/8 the eighth note gets the beat and there are 6 per measure, in 3/4 the quarter note gets the beat and there are 3 per measure. They sound pretty much identical and may even look the same written out, but different songs require different signatures. Usually 6/8 is used for faster songs it makes it easier to follow I think. |
Thanks, I think I got it. But what if there is 1 quarter note and 4 eighth notes, is it 6/8?
| 1 2 3 | | | | | 3/4 1 2 3 4 5 6 | | | | | 6/8 - extra accent. Hardly any difference.Notes lasting longer than the denominator make it much harder. 1 2 3
| | | | | 3/4
1 2 3 4 5 6
| | | | | 6/8 -now a clearer difference. 1 2 3
| | | | | 3/4
1 2 3 4 5 6
| | | | | 6/8 - syncopa. A "wrong" note is accentuated because it "covers" the stronger beat. Sometimes it's hard to guess which is correct. I think musicians don't waste time for such stupid things. They just play.
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Abstrakt
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Posted: April 28 2006 at 09:52 |
6/8 can just be like 2 bars in 3/4... some people mix that together...
but it's wrong... 6/8 is more like 4/4 with 2 extra beats
(at least in african music)
Edited by Abstrakt - April 28 2006 at 09:52
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