Distorted1987
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Re: Odd Time Signatures
You could put an accent anywhere you wanted to couldn't you?
You could put an accent anywhere you wanted to couldn't you?
Distorted1987 said:You could put an accent anywhere you wanted to couldn't you?
Distorted1987 said:You could put an accent anywhere you wanted to couldn't you?
Nightrunner said:You can definitely accent wherever, depending on the feel you want to establish.
Breaking the mixed meter into groupings based on accents just feels more natural than accenting "against the grain" so to speak. Like if I want to have a 3 feel followed by either a 4 feel or 2 - 2's feel, I'd count it 1-2-3 1-2-3-4 or 1-2-3 1-2 1-2. If I want a 4 or 2-2's feel followed by a 3 feel, then I'd count it 1-2-3-4 1-2-3 or 1-2 1-2 1-2-3.
It just keeps it all straight in my brain while playing. Also lets me do things like add galloping and other stuff during the mixed meters to help with the accentuations. Fun stuff!
Maybe I could provide a few clips demonstrating what I'm talking about... not possible right this second though! I'm actually going to go watch a friend's band play tonight.
--Nightrunner
taphappy said:That's a good idea. Make it whenever you can.
fuzzyratfarts said:Money by Pink Floyd is in 7/8. Listening to it makes everything seem easy to me. Some songs in odd time sound weird to the untrained ear but songs such as Money are very groovable.
moog1000 said:I will have to disagree on this one!nder:
Let me say something before I start - time signiatures are just ways of dividing up bars for transcription purposes, so you're open to write a song down in just about any time you like. Whether it makes it readable is another matter...
Back to the point, Money really implies a 7/4 feel. Count as the song plays, you can definitely make out 7 beats. 7/8 wouldn't fit unless you were playing double-time in a tempo half the speed of the original, which means you have double the number of notes in a bar to read!
I'll elaborate:
7/4 = 7 quarter notes
7/8 = 7 8th notes.
If you add 8th notes to 7/4 and map the two against each other:
1-a-2-a-3-a-4-a-5-a-6-a-7-a
1-2-3-4-5-6-7
If you wrote the song in 7/8 you would have the riff stradling 2 bars which isn't vey nice, unless you had the tempo halved with it played double time, which again isn't that nice. What gives it away is the riff - if you can count more than 7 8th notes (using the beat) in one rotation of a riff then it's probably not 7/8. It just so happens you can count 14 8th notes here which is 14/8 or 7/4.
That's explained really bad, but you'll have to trust. I saw a documentry about DSOTM where Gilmour said the song was in 7/8, so even he gets it wrong!
Great thread!
I always thought of Money as being in mixed meter 4/4:3/4. You're right though: it's not 7/8.
The drum beats are the key to determining time signature. If the song were really 7/8, Nick Mason would be doing half as many kick drum hits. The prototypical rock beat, variations of which appear in almost every rock/pop/metal song in existence, is kick on quarter notes 1 and 3, snare on quarter notes 2 and 4.
damn that does sound coolUploaded an excerpt of the crazier compound mixed meter - It's more of an exercise because it's not very melodic. Called it "Compound Craziness."
http://www.soundclick.com/bands/songInfo.cfm?bandID=583412&songID=4276999
The meter changes from 15/8 to 13/8 to 11/8 to 10/8 then repeats.
I counted it:
1-2-3-4 | 1-2-3 | 1-2-3-4 | 1-2-3-4
1-2-3-4 | 1-2-3 | 1-2 | 1-2-3-4
1-2-3-4 | 1-2-3 | 1-2-3-4
1-2-3-4 | 1-2 | 1-2-3-4
Hopefully someone will find all of this helpful or at least somewhat interesting!
--Nightrunner
Yes, a very interesting and helpful thread indeed
Everyone's comments have been helpful..
I come from South-Eastern Europe where you can alternate between 7/8, 9/8 11/8 and all that crazy stuff when you are 5 years old
For example, a common way to count 7/8 would be 123 12 12...it sounds very cool.
There's great songs out there in odd signatures..Someone asked about a suggestion for a Dream Theater song.. Well, there are very few which are not odd![]()
Yeah , sometimes I think about that too. And the diatonic system. I mean it's great, but I wonder what our music would look like if it wasn't adopted as standard. There are of course parts of the world where different systems are used, but it sounds weird. At least to me. Probably because I am used to the western scales...Yes, it makes me wonder just how limited we are in mainstream western music, where everything seems to revolve round 4. Just imagine if back in the day they decided 5 would make a good bar length...then we'd be moaning about 5 being too standard probably.....
Yeah you're right.I had many problems to teach many drummers how to play a 9/8 correctly.It seemd like they always played a 7/8 after a 9/8 to compansade it.Yeah , sometimes I think about that too. And the diatonic system. I mean it's great, but I wonder what our music would look like if it wasn't adopted as standard. There are of course parts of the world where different systems are used, but it sounds weird. At least to me. Probably because I am used to the western scales...
Yeah you're right.I had many problems to teach many drummers how to play a 9/8 correctly.It seemd like they always played a 7/8 after a 9/8 to compansade it.
like the topic name easyly explains ,the western world desribes that as "odd" ,actually ,it is not!!!It's just more rich in any aspect and really easier to create new emotions.
Whenever i hear TOOL ,DT ,Nevermore ,people ask me why don't i hear to normal music(all of them are metalheads ,so not pop kids).This explains everything.Only musicians and people on drugs are hearing "unregular" rythms.It is not easy to consume ,and understands for western community.And if you go to east , everybody becomes "genius" ,since they can count everytime till 22 or 7 or 11 ,not 8 hehehehe:smokin: