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Question for Dwellar musicians
Here's something I just don't get and I wonder if the collective dwellar brain can 'splain me:
In music people talk about things being 3/4 time or 4/4 time etc. I've looked at wikipedia and had people tell me it's the number of beats per measure. Great, but the word time throws me off as does measure. Is there a set length of time, i.e. seconds that a measure lasts? if so, why not say it is 4 beats per second? or can 4/4 time be played fast or slow? How can it help you if 4/4 time can be fast or slow, then it would be sort of meaningless, I imagine to have a time signature at all. from wiki: "In musical notation, a bar (or measure) is a segment of time defined as a given number of beats of a given duration" OK, so what is the duration? how can a beat be drawn out? I think of a beat as being the musical equivalent of a point in space only slightly chubbier. I understand that 8/4 time is faster than 3/4 time but I don't get where the actual time is. |
they should go metric, too many fractions
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The "time" has nothing to do with the tempo. Sure, that may make it a dumb word to use, but it is what it is.
8/4 time isn't necessarily faster than 3/4 time. It just says there are 8 beats before the composer is going to put another little vertical line on the staff. Measures really only exist as a reference to help musicians play together with each other, kind of like page numbers. You can transcribe music into a different time scale if you want to, just like you can transcribe into a different clef. Some time scales inherently suggest an accented beat, like 3/4 time is expected to have that familiar "DUN dun dun" waltz sound, but you could write that same waltz in 4/4 if you really wanted to, and just put egregious accent marks on every third note as necessary. |
OK, still have no idea. in 8/4 time or 4/4 time how fast are those beats?
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Try counting. (My ex tried to teach me this same stuff.)
I remember most songs being one...two...three...four... one...two...three...four... one...two...three...four... (4/4 time?) but some were one..two..three..four..five one..two..three..four..five one..two..three..four..five (5/4 time?) Yeah, probably no help either. |
I should know this stuff. We covered it in "clapping for credit" in college. Fundamentals of Music. 101
ta ta ti ti ti ti ta ta Can't remember it at all, but I remember it made sense and had logic at the time. |
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I think what I have said is accurate, but let me reflect and give a better answer at a later time (busy now). Search for the thread "Stuff I Don't Know" by BigV, where I explain what syncopation is and I think therein lies an explanation of what time signatures mean. |
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What you're asking is kind of like: if I translate Don Quixote into English, will it be faster or slower than the Spanish version? You can read either language as fast or as slow as you want, and you can write a book in whatever language you want. They are independent variables. |
So can a measure be empty of notes?
Wait, let's say we're singing "do re mi fa so la ti do" That's eight notes. How many measures is that? or Bars? So, if in 4/4 time, there'd be 1,2,3,4 1,2,3,4 1,2,3,4 and in those four beats how many of the notes get sung? And in 8/4 time there'd be 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8 and the same number of notes get sung as in 4/4 time, just more beats? |
Measures = bars.
If each of the do, re, me... was a quarter note ( a one beat note) in 4/4 it would be two measures. In 8/4 it would be one measure. It would be the same number of notes and the same number of beats just divided differently. One can have empty space in music they are known as rests, periods of silence. |
Like Mendelsshon's Song Without Notes.
i slay me |
SN - you're looking at only one half of the information which defines "time" in written music. The time signature (3/4, for example) tells you how many beats there are in a bar. 3/4 is a waltz time so you'd count, giving each beat an equal length in time, but stressing the first beat
ONE two three ONE two three ONE two three ONE two three ... The "tempo mark" for this waltz example would be shown as the symbol for a quarter-note = 180. This means that there are 180 quarter-notes in a minute, or (coincidentally) one bar is one second long. You could play the music much more slowly, but then it would be difficult to dance to :). It might become a lovely lyrical tune, instead ... Quote:
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1,2,3,4,1,2,3,4,1,2,3,4 vs 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8 I've taken the spaces out as the beats are regularly spaced in time. The time signature shows where the emphasis should fall. I have no idea if this is helpful at all ... |
Perhaps it may be easier for you to understand if you ask someone who knows music and explain it to you in person. Or if you have a music sheet in question, show it to us and perhaps the answer may be better exemplified.
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In broad terms, the accents for 4/4 time are loud soft medium soft (or so my piano teacher had me believe), then there's 3/4 which is loud soft soft, and if you want to get really tricky and confuse the issue further, you could look at 6/8 time which usually comes out like a fast waltz time beat because you're changing the base note (4) to an 8th note which of course in musical terms it a shorter beat (in comparison to a 4th note).
eta: I hope I've got that right. It's been a while since I played much classical music and had to think about the time. I'm sure limey can correct me if I'm wrong. :) |
Subdivisions (such as quarter, eighth, or sixteenth notes) are the numerator in the fraction which states the time signature. It is incorrect to think of subdivisions as occuring faster or slower. Literally (chronologically) this is accurate, but this is not compatible with the system of how music is constructed. There is no value system to measure the faster or slower rate of different subdivisions--except as fraction values of a measure which moves forward at a BPM (beats-per-minute) tempo (the beats in a measure being the denominator of the fraction which states the time signature).
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