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Cygnus X-2
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Topic: Bizarre Time Sigs Posted: March 23 2005 at 20:56 |
This is a question: What is the oddest time signature you've seen displayed in a song?
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penguindf12
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Posted: March 23 2005 at 22:10 |
Hmm...
Van Der Graaf Generator's "Man-Erg" has a section in 11/4 (or 11/8). Anyway, there's 11 beats per measure. On the same album (Pawn Hearts), they use 10/4 (or 10/8 -- again, I haven't figured out how to use the bottom digit yet) in the "Clot Thickens" part of "A Plague of Lighthouse Keepers". Also, I'm pretty sure that "Kosmos Tours" is in some weird signature, but I haven't figured it out yet. Van Der Graaf also used some 9/8 on "Sleepwalkers" from "Godbluff", I think.
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Metropolis
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Posted: March 24 2005 at 06:48 |
Once you've played in orchestras or brass bands at a reasonable level
(just amateur ones, like me) these /8 time signatures cease phasing you
if it remains in the same time sig for a while, its when it starts
changing time sig every bar or that the bar gets divided into
sixteenths that it gets complicated.
On sheet music the strangest ones ive seen are ones like 13/16 and
17/16, although ive played pieces in 9/2, which is far more difficult
than it sounds as there is a bar the full width of the page with few
points of reference in them (unless you "cheat" and draw in lines for
the beat, like I do)
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goose
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Posted: March 24 2005 at 12:48 |
65/64, it's got to be.
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Posted: March 24 2005 at 16:20 |
Rush used 13/4, 4/4, 12/8, and 5/4 in the song Freewill. 13/4 must be the oddest I've ever seen...or want to see!
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penguindf12
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Posted: March 24 2005 at 18:28 |
I put together something in 13/4 on the bass by doing two riffs in 4/4 followed by one in 5/4, and it actually sounds fairly natural. You can do the same with 11/4 by doing two in 4/4 then one in 3/4. The weirdest one I've done is 19/4 by doing a simple measure of 10/4 followed by 9/4. Okay, so I'm not so sure about the "/4s" here, but since I wrote it, hey, it's whatever I say.
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goose
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Posted: March 24 2005 at 18:52 |
Try jamming in 15/8: no matter how you accent it, it's always unbalanced.
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Sweetnighter
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Posted: March 25 2005 at 01:20 |
Crimson Prince wrote:
Rush used 13/4, 4/4, 12/8, and 5/4 in the song
Freewill. 13/4 must be the oddest I've ever seen...or want to see! |
Beat me to it!
Dave Brubeck was fond of odd time sigs... 5/4 in the classic "take
five", 7/4 in "unsquare dance" and 9/8 in "blue rondo a la turk"....
but if you're just talking prog then ignore him.
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"Banco Del Mutuo Soccorso? Is that like the bank of Italian soccer death or something?" -my girlfriend
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Sweetnighter
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Posted: March 25 2005 at 01:24 |
penguindf12 wrote:
Hmm...
Van Der Graaf Generator's "Man-Erg" has a section in 11/4 (or 11/8).
Anyway, there's 11 beats per measure. On the same album (Pawn Hearts),
they use 10/4 (or 10/8 -- again, I haven't figured out how to use the
bottom digit yet) in the "Clot Thickens" part of "A Plague of
Lighthouse Keepers". Also, I'm pretty sure that "Kosmos Tours" is in
some weird signature, but I haven't figured it out yet. Van Der Graaf
also used some 9/8 on "Sleepwalkers" from "Godbluff", I think. |
the bottom digit denotes what note type is designated as one beat...
for example, a "4" means that a quarter note is one beat, whereas an
"8" means that an eight note gets one beat.... so on and so forth...
its usually not something you can tell from listening to a song, its
more of a notation thing, although an experienced listener can probably
differentiate between 3/4 and 6/8, both of which are waltz time sigs.
(don't you love music theory?!)
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I bleed coffee. When I don't drink coffee, my veins run dry, and I shrivel up and die.
"Banco Del Mutuo Soccorso? Is that like the bank of Italian soccer death or something?" -my girlfriend
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Beau Heem
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Posted: March 25 2005 at 06:20 |
Time signatures are lovely...
Too bad I'm lacking in the english terminology of the field, but I'll try my best to write something comprehensible...
IMO, time signatures themselves cannot be "complex" or "simple". They
are simply an instrument of notation (and, when it comes to it, also a
means to learn a piece by heart for the musicians...).
This means that the weirdest rhytmic elements aren't necessarily played
in the "weirdest" time signature. Sometimes the weirdest rhytmic idea
has to be presented via some other instrument of notation than the time
signature - just to make sure that the musicians understand what is
meant...
An example:
First measure: an "ordinary" 4/4, (8 x 8th note)
Second Measure: again 4/4, each beat divided into triplets (12 x "8th
note" when written, where an 8th note really is a 12th note)
Third measure: 7/8 - the last 8th is "missing"
Fourth measure: 11/12... a third note of a triplet is "missing",
creating a rather wild rhythm (especially if the tempo of the
piece is high enough).
Now, theoretically, I have thought of carrying the rhytmic structure a
bit further to the abnormal by adding an 8th note (a real 8th note and
not the 12th note) to the 11/12 measure. That would constitute a
measure with a time signature of 25/24, but it would probably be too
damn hard to play for any band...
Speaking of funny rhythmic elements, I once demanded a drummer to play
three beats with his feet while doing seven beats with his hands... It
took him a couple of months to get the "beat" going, and when he came
to me saying that he finally got it (not that he would have played it
nice and easy or anything), I couldn't remember why I wanted such a
rhythm in the first place...
Classical (or preferably, modern) music has used such rhytmic changes
(from straight beats into triplet beats) for centuries, but those
changes have traditionally been long (or longer) lasting than one or
two measures and therefore it has made more sense to use a tempo change
in the notation instead of a time signature change.
Cheers
-Beau
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--No enemy but time--
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Moribund
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Posted: March 25 2005 at 06:43 |
Well, any classical music from the 20th Century is likely to use constantly changing time sigs - check Stravinsky's Rite of Spring or Soldier's Tale for examples. Some times composers will put in 'silly' sigs just to be controversial. For prog lovers, two good examples of 13/8 times are Robbery Assault & Battery (middle solo) and Starless (Whole middle instrumental - 13/4 then 13/8)
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etigger
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Posted: March 25 2005 at 20:55 |
in the last 2 minutes of "Home" from Dream Theater's "Scenes From A Memory" They jam in a time sig Mike P explains as a 19/16 or 4/4 with 3 extra beats added between each measure.. HUH?
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topographic2112
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Posted: March 26 2005 at 00:25 |
I never realized Genesis' "Turn It On Again" is in 13/8. I didn't notice it until seeing The Genesis Songbook.
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topographic2112
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Posted: March 26 2005 at 00:26 |
I've never studied time signatures. I need to start.
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"Rock is the medium of our generation." - Yes - "Release, Release"
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penguindf12
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Posted: March 26 2005 at 02:06 |
I found a church hymn called "Morning Has Broken" which is in 9/4. And it's a song I know fairly well, too...I never would have guessed!
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Cygnus X-2
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Posted: November 03 2005 at 20:07 |
Thought maybe I'd resurrect this old one and see if anyone can shed some new light.
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goose
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Posted: November 03 2005 at 20:20 |
I don't think anyone's going to top 65/64!
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Cygnus X-2
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Posted: November 03 2005 at 20:26 |
goose wrote:
I don't think anyone's going to top 65/64! |
Who played in 65/64?
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BaldFriede
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Posted: November 03 2005 at 20:58 |
A good part of Roman Bunka's "Glowin' " from his album "Dein Kopf Ist ein Schlafendes Auto" is in 34/8.
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cobb
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Posted: November 03 2005 at 21:03 |
Anything with a first number divisible by three is just compound time (dotted note as the beat value) and is pretty straightforward, but you guys are coming up with some pretty weird signatures here- did you make them up?
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