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BaldJean View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 20 2006 at 21:10
listen to "Glowin'" from "Dein Kopf ist ein Schlafendes Auto" by Roman Bunka, then you have the answer. 17/16


A shot of me as High Priestess of Gaia during our fall festival. Ceterum censeo principiis obsta
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 21 2006 at 10:20
A random pattern of every possible time signature in one song would be the most complicated.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 22 2006 at 03:20
Originally posted by Guest Guest wrote:

There really is no such thing as 17/16. Time sigs like this get written on occasion but it is mostly for shock effect (or out of ignorance on the part of the composer. Zappa was by no means ignorant and shock value was something he placed a high priority on so...) and it appears to be working well on many of you.

Our rhythmic brain wiring will simply not accept the reality of a time sig like that. We understand it mathematicaly but in reality we break all rhythmic information down into groupings of 1, 2, 3 and maybe 4 (four can be felt in 2 + 2 or 3 + 1), pulses. See my breakdown of the Apocalypse above.

So as I explained above a meter like 17/16 is in reality a repeating pattern of smaller pulse groupings such as 4+3+4+3+3 or 3+2+3+3+4+2 etc

The trick to learning to play and to listen to these pieces is to detect and "feel" the smaller patterns within the larger structure of the measure. Otherwise you'l completely lose your sanity trying to count to 17 over and over again. Trust me no trained musician will EVER do that.
    
    

    
Sure, but, for me at least, something like 17/16 is visually much more pleasing than 4+3+4+3+3 etc. Having said that, i'm not a sight reader, i'm a composer/rehearser, so when i come across a sig like 17/16 i already know how to play and group it in my head. Though i don't count the groupings, i just know the rhythm. I wouldn't be looking at sheet music regardless.

Maybe it's also ego, you know, the more complex you write a time signature the more impressive you seem to others. For me it's probably a combination of ego and visuals/neatness.

Anyways, i think most time signatures are relatively easy within themselves. As i said before, i don't really count beats, i just memorise the rhythm so when i'm playing, 7/8 or 9/16 etc. mean little to me. When it gets tricky is when you add rhythmic devices such as polyrhythms or polymeters.

But to answer the topic question, there are rare cases where composers see fit to disrupt the standard metric measurement of your quarter, 8th, 16th (etc.) notes and use absurd signatures like 5/10...

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Historically, this device has been prefigured wherever composers have written tuplets; for example, a 2/4 bar consisting of 3 triplet crotchets could arguably more sensibly be written as a bar of 3/6. Henry Cowell's piano piece "Fabric" (1920) throughout employs separate divisions of the bar (anything from 1 to 9) for the three contrapuntal parts, using a scheme of shaped noteheads to make the differences visually clear, but the pioneering of these signatures is largely due to Brian Ferneyhough. Thomas Ades has also made extensive use of them, for example in his piano work "Traced Overhead" (1996), the second movement of which contains, amongst more conventional meters, bars in such signatures as 2/6, 9/14 and 5/24. A gradual process of diffusion into less rarefied musical circles seems to be underway, hence for example, John Pickard's work "Eden", commissioned for the 2006 finals of the National Brass Band Championships of Great Britain, which contains bars of 3/10.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_signature#.22Irrational.22_meters

I know that doesn't really concern prog (at least not prog rock ), but i figured i'd throw it out there anyway.

Speaking strictly about prog, i'd probably say On The Virg or Planet X use some pretty silly time sigs as well.
    
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 26 2006 at 12:45
Just Found Out that "Rational Gaze" by Meshuggah is in 4/4! Shocked
It sounds very complex because it's put together very complex. Probably with 16th notes, which technically makes it 16/16.
 
A really cool time-signature is in "Solitary Shell" by Dream Theater.
One section is in 11/8 put together like 6/4+5/4.
Then it changes to a bar of 11/8, followed by a bar of 12/8, that sounds really cool.
 
And something that would sound cool is 15/16 put together like 3+2+4+5 (14/16) plus a 16th note, to make it 15/16.
Or, something like 23/16 put together like a bar of 4/16, one bar of 5/16, a bar of 7/16, a bar of 2/16, and finally a bar of 5/16.
 
Well, that was a waste of time.


Edited by Abstrakt - September 30 2006 at 10:44
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 30 2006 at 10:46
Eloy's song, "Giant" has a great use of the 6/4 Signature.
The Time Signature in "Mars, The Bringer Of War" by Gustav Holst is hard to count Pinch
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 30 2006 at 10:53
Originally posted by Abstrakt Abstrakt wrote:


It sounds very complex because it's put together very complex. Probably with 16th notes, which technically makes it 16/16

    

No it doesn't! Actually, making it 16/16 makes the sixteenth notes slower because the 16th note gets the beat.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 30 2006 at 11:03
Originally posted by Arrrghus Arrrghus wrote:

Originally posted by Abstrakt Abstrakt wrote:


It sounds very complex because it's put together very complex. Probably with 16th notes, which technically makes it 16/16

    

No it doesn't! Actually, making it 16/16 makes the sixteenth notes slower because the 16th note gets the beat.
 
16/16 is basically 4/4 with "more" notes within the bar, if you get my point.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 06 2006 at 03:05
Originally posted by Philéas Philéas wrote:

A random pattern of every possible time signature in one song would be the most complicated.


Yes, it's called spontaneous music, like the Dead on a good night or maybe KC's 'Thrakattak'.
    
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 06 2006 at 08:19
I remember Bruford saying in an interview that KC are the only band he's played in where he gets to use a 17/16 time signature & still stay in a decent hotel.

Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 07 2006 at 10:04
Originally posted by Jim Garten Jim Garten wrote:

I remember Bruford saying in an interview that KC are the only band he's played in where he gets to use a 17/16 time signature & still stay in a decent hotel.
 
LOLLOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 08 2006 at 13:02
Meshuggah "Future Breed Machine" - the clean guitar part before the solo is in 13/8, the breakdown is in 7/4

Meshuggah "New Millenium Cyanide Christ" - 5 bars of 23/16 + 1 bar of 13/16, adding up to 128/16 (or simply 4/4)

Mars Volta "Cygnus... Vismund Cygnus" - various movements of the song contain passages in 10/4, 11/8, 15/4, and 29/16

Dream Theater "Dance Of Eternity" - incorporates an incredible amount of time signature changes (in order, each entry written once): 4/4, 7/8, 3/4, 13/16, 15/16, 17/16, 14/16, 5/4, 6/8, 2/4, 5/8, 11/4, 9/4, 7/16, 6/16, 5/16, 10/16, 9/8, 15/8, 12/16, 16/16 (3+3+3+3+2+2), 3/8.

No, i didn't write that myself Wacko



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 08 2006 at 13:15
I wrote in 11/16 once. The first four bars took me 2 complete hours to do something coherent. But it ended up very well. I'll upload the sheet if i can find it...


Edited by Revan - November 08 2006 at 13:15

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 09 2006 at 15:06
  • (1998) "New Millennium Cyanide Christ" by Meshuggah - 5 bars of 23/16 + 1 bar of 13/16, adding up to 128/16 (or simply 4/4)
...what!??!?!?!ConfusedConfusedConfusedConfusedConfused
"You want me to play what, Robert?"
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 09 2006 at 17:07
A big band tune by Don Ellis called "33 222 1 222."  It's in 19/4.  If you don't think that's too complicated, just look at the title.  That's how each measure is subdivided.  There's another Don Ellis tune called "27/16."  Guess what time signature it's in. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 09 2006 at 17:30
Originally posted by el böthy el böthy wrote:

  • (1998) "New Millennium Cyanide Christ" by Meshuggah - 5 bars of 23/16 + 1 bar of 13/16, adding up to 128/16 (or simply 4/4)
...what!??!?!?!ConfusedConfusedConfusedConfusedConfused


sh*t...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 10 2006 at 13:20
"Retropolis" by The Flower Kings - 9/8 and 11/8 in the intro

I just found that out Cool
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 10 2006 at 13:23
Originally posted by Arrrghus Arrrghus wrote:

Originally posted by Abstrakt Abstrakt wrote:


It sounds very complex because it's put together very complex. Probably with 16th notes, which technically makes it 16/16

    

No it doesn't! Actually, making it 16/16 makes the sixteenth notes slower because the 16th note gets the beat.


You're wrong!
This is 4/4:

One                      Two                   Three                Four

And this is 16/16
Onetwothreefour
onetwothreefour onetwothreefour onetwothreefour

Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 18 2006 at 20:19
I think you'll find 16/16 is more likely to start
Onetwothree onetwothree onetwothree...!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 01 2006 at 07:49
Meshuggah - Elastic:
  • Intro Riff has a changing pattern of 8/16 and 14/16
  • Verses contains patterns of 5/16, 6/16 and 4/32
  • Interlude before Solo is in 4/4
  • Pre-Solo and Solo is mostly in 19/16, but also contains 5/16, 6/16, 7/16 and 8/16
Big smile (I didn't read the time signatures myself)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 01 2006 at 09:59
Abstract you are the one who is wrong here. I understand what you're thinking, but musically it is not correct. More notes in a measure do not change the lower number of the time Sig.    

If the measure were to be broken down into irregular groupings of 16th note pulses then and only then would you use 16 in the lower number. Even then as Guest notes, the correct way to set up the time sig. would be as guest put it (3+3+4+2+4 / 16). Larger top numbers are only used as reverie points out to avoid "clutter" in a score. No real musician will count that measure as 16/16.

If the sixteenth notes are organized in groups of four (like the example you gave) you are in 4/4 time. The quarter note (the lower 4) can go at any tempo you like making the 16th notes go anywherer from really, really fast to not so fast, to almost slow. A 16th note is not a guarantee of a certain speed. The organizing pulse is still found at the quarter note level.

One might just ask well as what the most complicated mathematical equation is. The equation might take up many pages and the answer could turn out to be 1. The time signature thing is exactly the same. The gibberish time signatures you all are putting up DO NOT EXIST musically, they only exist mathematically.

The measures in question all break down into sub groupings of 2, 3, or 4 pulses. No player will ever count to 27 (or even 17 or 11) as he reads his part. He will look at the music and break it down into sub-groupings, take out his pencil and mark the score accordingly.

Similarly, a conductor will not beat time in groupings of anything more than 4 beats. These "complex" time signatures are a figment of the over-active imaginations of some guys who want to appear clever to their gullible fans. I know no one wants to hear this because its fun to think of how "amazing" all these time signatures are, but musically, it's a fallacy. Sorry.

As for this stuff:
Historically, this device has been prefigured wherever composers have written tuplets; for example, a 2/4 bar consisting of 3 triplet crotchets could arguably more sensibly be written as a bar of 3/6. Henry Cowell's piano piece "Fabric" (1920) throughout employs separate divisions of the bar (anything from 1 to 9) for the three contrapuntal parts, using a scheme of shaped noteheads to make the differences visually clear, but the pioneering of these signatures is largely due to Brian Ferneyhough. Thomas Ades has also made extensive use of them, for example in his piano work "Traced Overhead" (1996), the second movement of which contains, amongst more conventional meters, bars in such signatures as 2/6, 9/14 and 5/24. A gradual process of diffusion into less rarefied musical circles seems to be underway, hence for example, John Pickard's work "Eden", commissioned for the 2006 finals of the National Brass Band Championships of Great Britain, which contains bars of 3/10.

Show me a 6th note or a 14th note and I'll play it. Of course they do not exist and so, cannot be the pulse level "beat" of any composition. This is just another example of the self-important composer attemptiing to prove he knows more than his audience.

The pulse level of the pieces in question are NOT at those levels. This is an overly clever way of changing tempo without marking a simple tempo change in the score. Elliott Carter invented this concept in the 1950s and called it metric modulation. In brief, he took the tempo of a triplet or quintuplet and made that the new tempo of an eighth or quarter note, thus speeding up or slowing down the tempo of the piece. Carter accomplished it without changing the time signatures though, which made playing and conducting his pieces much simpler.

The current adaptation of Carter's concepts seem only intended to antagonize the player and conductor and prove the superiority of the composer's wonderful mind. The listener won't hear it and the player won't feel it, but the composer still insists it's real. In short it's gobbledygook.    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    

Edited by Trademark - December 01 2006 at 11:50
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