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MikeEnRegalia View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 09 2006 at 09:29
Originally posted by Sasquamo Sasquamo wrote:

The weirdest time signature I've ever heard isn't even in prog.  It's on Don Ellis's big band record, Live at Monterey.  It's in 19/4, and the title of the tune says how to divide each measure: 33 222 1 222.  There's like 3 bassists bowing the main bassline on their acoustic basses, and two drummers.  And the horns actually solo in this time signature.  And it's live.  Wow.
 
Search "Don Ellis" on Amazon, click on "Live at Monterey," play the sample of this tune, and then try to count it out.  It's not easy. 


Listen to Dream Theater - Metropolis Pt. 1.Big smile

Doesn't matter which song has the most complex time signature though ... I'd rather ask: "Which has the most complex time signature that actually makes sense in the context of the song?"Smile

BTW: That Don Ellis song is pretty nice! It definitely works, and compared to the DT song it's more a real time signature (while the DT song's middle part is rather a complex sequence of odd "standard" sigs). It's available on Napster too!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 22 2006 at 11:34
Originally posted by penguindf12 penguindf12 wrote:

I've gotten to where I do 5/4 and 7/8 as naturally as 4/4 (as in I'll just be siting there tapping my feet mindlessly, and then in retrospect realize it was in 7), but I like to think I've grown out of using odd time sigs just for their own sake. I mean, really. It's really quite arbitrary at some points, but others, it can be entirely necessary and cool. But especially when someone forces a song into a predetermined meter, it just sounds...forced. Like Apocalypse in 9/8. Boo. It's just such a good setup, and then...bum bum BUM bum BOM bum bum bum BUM!!!! I mean, come on. It's a bit sad really; it's like the later works of the Residents. Idea first, music second. Doesn't stand up (I feel the same way about 'neo-prog'). That said, I love odd time signatures when used appropriately. For me, 7/8's crowning moment is Soft Machine's b-side suite on "Volume Two" ("Pig", "Orange Skin Food", "A Door Opens and Closes", "10:30 Returns to the Bedroom"), and of course "As Long as He Lies Perfectly Still". In fact, now that I think about it, most of that album is in 7! Let's see, uh..., "A Pataphysical Introduction" (Pts. I and II), "Hibou, Anenome, and Bear", the first bit of "Thank You Pierrot Lumiere"...all in 7/8! Then there's "Out of Tunes" in 5, but that's beside the point... anyway, what was I talking about again? Oh well.


Actually, no. They are not all in 7/8, "10:30 Returns to the Bedroom" is in 9/8. And it's obvious that Wyatt can't sing in those time measures, just listen carefully his voice after "Concise British Alphabet", it's hilarious! But it's also charming. Oh, I love that band!Hug

I would also like to point out "Thick as a brick", that hard-rocking part "see there! a son is born" is in 5/4, and literally half an hour later, when the bend is repeating the sequence, the same part is in 12/8. Nothing special, but I like those kind of details...

Personally, I never had any problems with 7/8, 9/8 or 5/4. I don't count, I just feel. But I guess I'm lucky because I am from Balkans where a dumbest drunken footbal hooligan could sing and clap his hands in 7/8Smile

 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 30 2006 at 17:20
Does someone here, would like to help me deciphering the time signature(s) in the song Day of the Baphomets by the Mars Volta, please ?
 
It would be nice, and it will help to figure out on other songs Tongue
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 01 2006 at 12:35
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

[QUOTE=Sasquamo]The weirdest time signature I've ever heard isn't even in prog.  It's on Don Ellis's big band record, Live at Monterey.  It's in 19/4, and the title of the tune says how to divide each measure: 33 222 1 222.  There's like 3 bassists bowing the main bassline on their acoustic basses, and two drummers.  And the horns actually solo in this time signature.  And it's live.  Wow.

BTW: That Don Ellis song is pretty nice! It definitely works, and compared to the DT song it's more a real time signature (while the DT song's middle part is rather a complex sequence of odd "standard" sigs). It's available on Napster too!
 
I've just bought Don Ellis Orchestra Live In Montreux and Ellis's notes found in the liner notes go into quite some detail about complex time signatures. However, wrt to shifting complex time signatures within tunes and associated improv, check out Dave Brubeck Quartet at Carnegie Hall. The liner notes record drummer Joe Morello's post concert discussions about where the quartet went timewise:
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 08 2006 at 12:25
I'm sure it was Bill Bruford who described King Crimson as "the only band with whom I get to play 17/15 time, and still get to stay in a decent hotel"

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 10 2006 at 11:24
Hey, guys, could you help?

I know all the theory behind time signatures and seem to understand everything, but when it comes to actually working out the meter of a given song, I'm confused (well, of course I know 4/4 and 3/4 but not much beyond that).

Could anyone explain in layman's terms how can I figure out the meter of a particular song? What do I listen to? Drums?

Sorry, if this sounds stupid...
Please suggest a good sig!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 10 2006 at 11:28
Meshuggah's New Millenium Cyanide Christ is pretty cool:

"Haake beats a rather slow 4/4 rhythm with his hands, while the bass drums and guitars play a repetitive 23/16 rhythm pattern on top of it. As the subdivided pattern is repeated, the pattern's accents shift to different beats on each repetition. After repeating the 23/16 pattern five times, a shorter 13/16 pattern is played once. These patterns sum up to 128 16th notes, which equals exactly 8 measures in 4/4 meter"

Cool
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 10 2006 at 12:50
Originally posted by Zodiak Zodiak wrote:

Hey, guys, could you help?

I know all the theory behind time signatures and seem to understand everything, but when it comes to actually working out the meter of a given song, I'm confused (well, of course I know 4/4 and 3/4 but not much beyond that).

Could anyone explain in layman's terms how can I figure out the meter of a particular song? What do I listen to? Drums?

Sorry, if this sounds stupid...


I'm not sure I can help since for me I just count it out and I eventually figure out what it is, so I don't really have any "clues."  All I can say is to first find the beat of the song and then find out where beat "one" is, then just count the beats in each measure.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 10 2006 at 12:55
Originally posted by Jim Garten Jim Garten wrote:

I'm sure it was Bill Bruford who described King Crimson as "the only band with whom I get to play 17/15 time, and still get to stay in a decent hotel"


That would be nice, but 17/15 doesn't exist.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2006 at 17:38
Originally posted by Hierophant Hierophant wrote:

Most of what I heard from Meshuggah is in 4/4 with way over the top syncopationOne thing I can't stand is bands using time signatures with little or no melodic development and just tastelessly pounding out the time signature almost as if to say "hey look we're playing in 7/8!", anyone can add or take away an eighth note or two, the real skill comes in actually feeling the time signature and playing comfortably. The musical phrasings should dictate what type of rhythms should be used, not the other way around - it's no wonder that many bands wind up sounding like droning machines rather than actually conveying musical ideas. I'm not refering to any band in particular here, but it seems to be like some sort of trend - to grind out those weird time signatures without the music to back it up.


I love Jethro Tull for that... they always make you forget they are using odd time signatures or time shifts... Heavy Horses' chorus has amazing use time shifts, starting from 4/4 and then adding 3+4/4 and then 4+2/4 (the +2 is at the song's climax).... but it doesn't seem to matter... the time signatures are meant to be there... unlike many Gentle Giant songs (e.g. knots... or almost every song in The Power and The Glory) where every time shift is sudden and show-offy ("hey look, we are using time shifts!!").. That's why I don't devote myself on collecting their entire discography.
    
    

Edited by Chus - December 13 2006 at 17:41
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