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Soulman View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: Time Signatures
    Posted: March 20 2005 at 17:11
Hello again,

Something has been plaguing my mind about prog. How in the heck do you tell what time signature some prog songs are in? I'm just confused how you can figure out these abstract time signatures by just hearing it.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 20 2005 at 17:18

I have the same problem...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 21 2005 at 13:26

Try listening to the beat and then counting the notes!!!!!!!!!!

Don't eat the yellow snow!!!!!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 21 2005 at 17:56
Assuming it stays in the same time signature for a few bars, it isn't difficult once one gets used to it. As long as you can hear where each bar begins, then you just need to count the main beats between. It's when every bar's in a different time signature it starts to get tricky...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 22 2005 at 18:10
Originally posted by goose goose wrote:

Assuming it stays in the same time signature for a few bars, it isn't difficult once one gets used to it. As long as you can hear where each bar begins, then you just need to count the main beats between. It's when every bar's in a different time signature it starts to get tricky...


That isn't always accurate. For example, 6/8 can sound like 2/4 with triplets (or vice versa)

Then you get interesting things like 17/16...
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 22 2005 at 21:43

Personally, I think this is one of the most definitive elements of Progressive Rock Music...
the shifting time signatures, in addition to stuff like change-ups in instrumentation, etc.

BTW, I thought 6/8 resembles 3/4 (not arguing the point, just curious OK )




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 23 2005 at 04:30
I've tried trying to figure what parts of the songs are in what time signatures. I think I kind of got it while listening to Spock's Beard "The Great Nothing" .

Although it is hard to tell the difference between 6/8 and 3/4 and 12/8 and 4/4 because counting the time can sound the same. Although due to musical notation, they are labelled 6/8 or 12/8 because of the style of music; 12/8 namely being swing and blues.

Although I hear about time signature like 17/16. Whoa-ho! That would be hard to figure out. Though I figure if you listen to the drums and the riffs, then you kind of start to get the idea.

However, confusing this topic is, it would seem mostly relevant to the artist. Although it never stopped us listeners/musicians from looking at the technical aspects of the songs.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 23 2005 at 15:55
Originally posted by Soulman Soulman wrote:

Hello again,

Something has been plaguing my mind about prog. How in
the heck do you
tell what time signature some prog songs are in? I'm just
confused how
you can figure out these abstract time signatures by just
hearing it.




If you own one, try a metronome.
Me, I'm counting out time.
Che
Wearing feelings on our faces when our faces took a rest...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 23 2005 at 17:13

The more elaborate ones are fairly hard to get if you're not used to it - but practice does make perfect.

2/4 is very rarely used, and, as was pointed out above, 6/8 sounds like 2/4 but with triplets - that's because the 6 quavers pulse in 2 groups of three - the beat is actually a dotted crotchet (three quavers) - it's the same for any piece in compound time (anything /8 is in compound time).

Most pieces I've heard in more complex time signatures tend to cheat - in 7/4, for example, you'll hear musicians play a "bar" of 4 then a bar of 3, because it makes counting easier. Very few, like "Money" are truly in 7 time. 7/8 is very rare indeed, and should sound like 2 and a third, but typically sounds more like 3 and a half beats - which is 7/4, of course.

I'm really not sure about anything in /16 time - I rather think it's showing off. Some of the great composers used similar time signatures - like Stravinsky - but typically only for a few bars in a piece (e.g. the Rite of Spring). Usually clusters of bars in what appear to be freaky time signatures appear, when the composer could simply have stuck a few extra accents in there - for example, Stravinsky sticks a few bars of 3/4 in between some bars of 6/8, then in another passage [110] we see 2 bars of 5/8, then one each of 7/8, 5/8, 3/8, 3/4, 3/8, 4/4, 3/8.

Unless you were looking at the score, you'd never count that lot - but you'd be forgiven for thinking the whole thing was in 9/8.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 23 2005 at 22:09
Originally posted by Soulman Soulman wrote:

Although I hear about time signature like 17/16. Whoa-ho! That would be hard to figure out. Though I figure if you listen to the drums and the riffs, then you kind of start to get the idea.


My friend wrote some stuff that had random bars of 17/16 thrown in with 4/4. It was pretty messed up, it sounded like 4/4 with an extra 16th note stuck in at the end. It really threw off your counting if you didn't know it was coming.
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 23 2005 at 22:23

Okay...I'm confused...

Alright. So I get the top digit: it's the number of beats per measure. But the bottom number confuses me. I know it's the "note which gets the beat". But how do you distinguish when counting? Like in "Money." How can you tell it's 7/4 and not 7/8 or 7/16 or 7/32 or 7/128 for that matter? How do you know?! And what's the difference between "one bar of 3/4 and one bar of 4/4" and one bar of 7/4 (or 7/8 or 7/16 or 7/32 etc.)?!!!!

Please clue me in here...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 24 2005 at 02:35
^^

Yea I'm about as confused as you

I can't really tell you how you can notice. Sometimes you just have to count the beats (mostly listening to the drums and a little bit of the melody playing), and it won't always make sense to go "1 and 2 and 3 and 4 and" in some parts of prog songs, it just won't work with the melody all the time, as the measure probably wouldn't end on a bad note.

You've got to think how it would look on paper. Yes you could write any song in 4/4 on paper; though it wouldn't make sense to the melody and the drummer who's keeping the rhythm. Time signatures are just restrictions to measures.

Just listen a bit more, you might get it. Though I think practice will help you understand it more.

However, I kind of doubt that a lot of prog songs are going to be 7/8 or 9/16; it's just too bloody difficult for the drummer to follow that kind of rhythm (though I applaud artists that can do so .)

As I said, it'd probably make more sense when you think of how score of the piece would look on paper.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 24 2005 at 02:37
I'm gonna take the chance to say.

MY GOSH PROG IS AWESOME!!!


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 24 2005 at 03:40
Originally posted by penguindf12 penguindf12 wrote:

Okay...I'm confused...

Alright. So I get the top digit: it's the number of beats per measure. But the bottom number confuses me. I know it's the "note which gets the beat". But how do you distinguish when counting? Like in "Money." How can you tell it's 7/4 and not 7/8 or 7/16 or 7/32 or 7/128 for that matter? How do you know?! And what's the difference between "one bar of 3/4 and one bar of 4/4" and one bar of 7/4 (or 7/8 or 7/16 or 7/32 etc.)?!!!!

Please clue me in here...

Generally, anything over 4 is "simple" time, and you just count the numbers. E.g; "Money" is in 7/4, so you just count 7 crotchet beats per bar - until the bit where it changes to 4/4.

Equally generally, anything over 8 is compound time, meaning that you count dotted crotchet beats while hearing effective triplets between the beats. Hence with 6/8, you count 2 dotted crotchets per bar.

/16 time is more difficult to gauge, as there are more permutations - generally the music will be broken into little chunks of 2s and 3s. Typically, music in this sort of time originates from the Balkans, where the frenetic dance music could only be recorded using Western notation using finer granularity than /8. The beats tend to be incredibly quick, as they are counted in semiquavers.

Then we get into the more complex time signatures demanded by Indian music and the polyrhythms of Salsa... but it can all be broken down into 2s and 3s.

Hope that gives at least one clue!



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 24 2005 at 06:23

Originally posted by kingofbizzare kingofbizzare wrote:



That isn't always accurate. For example, 6/8 can sound like 2/4 with triplets (or vice versa)

Then you get interesting things like 17/16...
 

If it sounds like 2/4 then you can call it 2/4. It doesn't really matter what the player/listener considers it as, as long as it's played with the right feel. What was written on the page (assuming there is one) is only a guide to how to play it (especially if there's a 3 against 2 crossrhythm, that way there's no definite answer). But in general, if there are triplets all the way through it's unlikely to sound like 2/4 anyway.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 24 2005 at 06:30
Originally posted by penguindf12 penguindf12 wrote:

Okay...I'm confused...

Alright. So I get the top digit: it's the number of beats per measure. But the bottom number confuses me. I know it's the "note which gets the beat". But how do you distinguish when counting? Like in "Money." How can you tell it's 7/4 and not 7/8 or 7/16 or 7/32 or 7/128 for that matter? How do you know?! And what's the difference between "one bar of 3/4 and one bar of 4/4" and one bar of 7/4 (or 7/8 or 7/16 or 7/32 etc.)?!!!!

Please clue me in here...

In general, the difference between 7/4 and 7/8 is one of feel (it can also depend on what the pulse has been in the bars before or after, ie. going from 4/4 to 7/4 the bars are nearly twice as long, wheras going from 4/4 to 7/8 they're slightly shorter.

Traditionally, 7/4 should be divided into 7 crotchets, perhaps with quavers between or anything like that. 7/8, on the other hand, is a compound time and should be divided into 3s (3,3,1 or 3,2,2) but again, these are only guidlines. Venturing into 7/16 and so on has a different feel again but since prog doesn't really follow the traditional timings there's not much point in cluttering the page with 64s and 128s all over the place.

The difference between 3/4 + 4/4 and 7/4 can be nothing, but the former expresses the accents (ie. on the first beat of each bar) much more explicitly, wheras 7/4 can be divided up in any number of ways.

A mention has to go to "A headache and a 64th", by Ron Jarzombek (of Spastic Ink/Watchtower), which has a 4/4 bar followed by a 1/64 bar (in effect, 65/64). It's really really irritating listening to because it just falls slightly later than you'd expect.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 24 2005 at 12:09
So what you're saying is....it really doesn't matter 'cause to tell the precise time you have to see the sheet music? And that you really can call something any time signature you want, but the "actual" time signature is the one that makes sense the most?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 24 2005 at 12:39

The problem is with all modern music (this doesn't just apply to time signatures) is that notation hasn't changed nearly so much as styles have. In the classical period, a time signature (along with some sort of idea of the feel and tempo) could tell you exactly how to accent the music, (apart from when there were deviations from the pattern, and they could be marked individually). Now, however, there is so much different that can be done in any time signature, that they're nowhere near as rigid as they were.

Since a time signature is only a way of notating the music that's heard, while sometimes there may be one definitive time signature that is obvious (often in more simple music, for example "Creep", by Radiohead is clearly in 4/4, with one chord per bar. There's not really any other way of writing it that makes sense, because it does stick to the same sort of metre that's been in existence for a very long time), a lot of the time you could fit a number of time signatures to the same music (often 6/8 and 2/4 (both have 2 main beats), or 9/8 and 3/4 (both have 3 main beats), but sometimes multiples like 6/8 and 12/8). In this case, it doesn't matter how you look at it, as long as if you're playing in a group you all play with the right sort of "feel". Basically, any sort of notation (apart from the actual pitches given) are simply a means to the end of playing in the right way. I'm finding this very difficult to explain, because it's a very abstract concept, but I hope I'm being some help.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 24 2005 at 15:38
Gotcha.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 24 2005 at 16:18

Probability-wise, 4/4 is nearly always your best bet. I always start by counting in 4/4 time at a moderate tempo: 1 and 2 and 3 and 4 and... If it works out great, the song is probably in 4/4, 2/4, 2/2, or 12/8. I always test 4/4 first because most music (even much of prog, at least partly) is in 4/4.

  I should also recommend using our beloved Internet as a "cheat sheet" for a few of the tunes causing you difficulty. For example, if I wanted to know the meters for Yes's Sound Chaser, I would do a Google search: Sound Chaser time signature. I play guitar, and this is how I crack a lot of these songs. For example, for the guitar solo in Tom Sawyer by Rush, I could NOT crack that time sig until I broke down and did a search for it. Right away, I found it was in 7/8. This is a time signature used a lot by the band. ie. intro to Anthem, intro to Subdivisions, Freewill, Natural Science, Distant Early Warning. I mention this, because a lot of bands have favorite meters that they like to write in. Yes uses 5/4 a bit (Sound Chaser, 5 percent for nothing).

 A few more ideas for you.

 When a new, for lack of a better term, "movement" or "impression" begins or when a new feel begins, I usually start counting again, just to be sure they have "tricked" me by slipping into a new meter. These movements may be signposted by a new chord progression.

Finally, here is a site that could fill in the crack for ya: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_signature

Good luck!



Edited by Crimson Prince
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