Music Fundamentals 2: Rhythm and Meter: Collection Editor
Music Fundamentals 2: Rhythm and Meter: Collection Editor
Music Fundamentals 2: Rhythm and Meter: Collection Editor
Collection Editor:
Terry B. Ewell
Music Fundamentals 2: Rhythm and Meter
Collection Editor:
Terry B. Ewell
Authors:
Terry B. Ewell
Catherine Schmidt-Jones
Online:
< http://cnx.org/content/col10716/1.1/ >
CONNEXIONS
In standard notation, a single musical sound is written as a note. The two most important things a written
piece of music needs to tell you about a note are its pitch - how high or low it is - and its duration - how
long it lasts.
To nd out the pitch
2 of a written note, you look at the clef3 and the key signature4 , then see what line
5
or space the note is on. The higher a note sits on the sta , the higher it sounds. To nd out the duration
of the written note, you look at the tempo (Chapter 11) and the time signature (Chapter 5) and then see
what the note looks like.
Figure 1.1: All of the parts of a written note aect how long it lasts.
The pitch of the note depends only on what line or space the head of the note is on. 6
(Please see pitch
1
2 CHAPTER 1. DURATION: NOTE LENGTHS IN WRITTEN MUSIC
, clef
7 and key signature8 for more information.) If the note does not have a head (see Figure 1.2 (Notes
Without Heads)), that means that it does not have one denite pitch.
Figure 1.2: If a note does not have head, it does not have one denite pitch. Such a note may be a
pitchless sound, like a drum beat or a hand clap, or it may be an entire chord rather than a single note.
The head of the note may be lled in (black), or not. The note may also have (or not) a stem, one or
more ags, beams connecting it to other notes, or one or more dots following the head of the note. All of
these things aect how much time the note is given in the music.
note: A dot that is someplace other than next to the head of the note does not aect the
rhythm. Other dots are articulation
9 marks. They may aect the actual length of the note (the
amount of time it sounds), but do not aect the amount of time it must be given. (The extra time
when the note could be sounding, but isn't, becomes an unwritten rest (Chapter 2).) If this is
confusing, please see the explanation in articulation
10 .
7 "Clef" <http://cnx.org/content/m10941/latest/>
8 "Key Signature" <http://cnx.org/content/m10881/latest/>
9 "Articulation" <http://cnx.org/content/m11884/latest/>
10 "Articulation" <http://cnx.org/content/m11884/latest/>
3
Figure 1.3
The simplest-looking note, with no stems or ags, is a whole note. All other note lengths are dened by
half note.
how long they last compared to a whole note. A note that lasts half as long as a whole note is a
quarter note. The pattern continues with eighth
A note that lasts a quarter as long as a whole note is a
notes, sixteenth notes, thirty-second notes, sixty-fourth notes, and so on, each type of note being
half the length of the previous type. (There are no such thing as third notes, sixth notes, tenth notes, etc.;
see Dots, Ties, and Borrowed Divisions (Chapter 3) to nd out how notes of unusual lengths are written.)
Figure 1.4: Note lengths work just like fractions in arithmetic: two half notes or four quarter notes
last the same amount of time as one whole note. Flags are often replaced by beams that connect the
notes into easy-to-read groups.
You may have noticed that some of the eighth notes in Figure 1.4 don't have ags; instead they have
a beam connecting them to another eighth note. If agged notes are next to each other, their ags can
be replaced by beams that connect the notes into easy-to-read groups. The beams may connect notes that
are all in the same beat, or, in some vocal music, they may connect notes that are sung on the same text
syllable. Each note will have the same number of beams as it would have ags.
4 CHAPTER 1. DURATION: NOTE LENGTHS IN WRITTEN MUSIC
Figure 1.5: The notes connected with beams are easier to read quickly than the agged notes. Notice
that each note has the same number of beams as it would have ags, even if it is connected to a dierent
type of note. The notes are often (but not always) connected so that each beamed group gets one beat.
This makes the notes easier to read quickly.
You may have also noticed that the note lengths sound like fractions in arithmetic. In fact they work
very much like fractions: two half notes will be equal to (last as long as) one whole note; four eighth notes
will be the same length as one half note; and so on. (For classroom activities relating music to fractions, see
Fractions, Multiples, Beats, and Measures
11 .)
Example 1.1
Figure 1.6
Figure 1.7
So how long does each of these notes actually last? That depends on a couple of things. A written note
lasts for a certain amount of time measured in beats (Section 5.1: Beats and Measures). To nd out exactly
how many beats it takes, you must know the time signature (Chapter 5). And to nd out how long a beat
is, you need to know the tempo (Chapter 11).
Example 1.2
Figure 1.8: In any particular section of a piece of music, a half note is always twice as long as a quarter
note. But how long each note actually lasts depends on the time signature and the tempo.
6 CHAPTER 1. DURATION: NOTE LENGTHS IN WRITTEN MUSIC
Whether a stem points up or down does not aect the note length at all. There are two basic ideas that lead
to the rules for stem direction. One is that the music should be as easy as possible to read and understand.
The other is that the notes should tend to be "in the sta" as much as reasonably possible.
Stem Direction
Figure 1.9: Keep stems and beams in or near the sta, but also use stem direction to clarify rhythms
and parts when necessary.
note: Thanks to everyone who participated in the survey! It was very useful to me, both as a
researcher and as an author, to get a better picture of my readers' goals and needs. I hope to begin
7
Figure 1.10
Chapter 2
1
Duration: Rest Length
A rest stands for a silence in music. For each kind of note (Chapter 1), there is a written rest of the same
length.
Figure 2.1
Figure 2.2
Rests don't necessarily mean that there is silence in the music at that point; only that that part is silent.
9
10 CHAPTER 2. DURATION: REST LENGTH
Often, on a sta
2 with multiple parts, a rest must be used as a placeholder for one of the parts, even if a
single person is playing both parts. When the rhythms are complex, this is necessary to make the rhythm
in each part clear.
Figure 2.3: When multiple simultaneous rhythms are written on the same sta, rests may be used to
clarify individual rhythms, even if another rhythm contains notes at that point.
The normal rule in common notation is that, for any line of music, the notes and rests in each measure
must "add up" to exactly the amount in the time signature (Chapter 5), no more and no less. For example,
in 3/4 time, a measure can have any combination of notes and rests that is the same length as three quarter
notes. There is only one common exception to this rule. As a simplifying shorthand, a completely silent
measure can simply have a whole rest. In this case, "whole rest" does not necessarily mean "rest for the
same length of time as a whole note"; it means "rest for the entire measure".
Figure 2.4: A whole rest may be used to indicate a completely silent measure, no matter what the
actual length of the measure will be.
note: Thanks to everyone who participated in the survey! It was very useful to me, both as a
researcher and as an author, to get a better picture of my readers' goals and needs. I hope to begin
updating the survey results module
3 in April. I will also soon begin making some of the suggested
additions, and emailed comments are still welcome as always.
Figure 2.5
Chapter 3
1
Dots, Ties, and Borrowed Divisions
A half note is half the length of a whole note; a quarter note is half the length of a half note; an eighth note
is half the length of a quarter note, and so on. (See Duration:Note Length (Chapter 1).) The same goes for
rests. (See Duration: Rest Length (Chapter 2).) But what if you want a note (or rest) length that isn't half
of another note (or rest) length?
One way to get a dierent length is by dotting the note or rest. A dotted note is one-and-a-half times the
length of the same note without the dot. In other words, the note keeps its original length and adds another
half of that original length because of the dot. So a dotted half note, for example, would last as long as a
half note plus a quarter note, or three quarters of a whole note.
Figure 3.1: The dot acts as if it is adding another note half the length of the original note. A dotted
quarter note, for example, would be the length of a quarter plus an eighth, because an eighth note is half
the length of a quarter note.
13
14 CHAPTER 3. DOTS, TIES, AND BORROWED DIVISIONS
Figure 3.2
A note may have more than one dot. Each dot adds half the length that the dot before it added. For
example, the rst dot after a half note adds a quarter note length; the second dot would add an eighth note
length.
Figure 3.3: When a note has more than one dot, each dot is worth half of the dot before it.
A dotted half lasts as long as a half note plus a quarter note. The same length may be written as a half note
and a quarter note tied together. Tied notes are written with a curved line connecting two notes that are
on the same line or the same space in the sta. Notes of any length may be tied together, and more than
The sound they stand for will be a single note that is the length
two notes may be tied together.
of all the tied notes added together. This is another way to make a great variety of note lengths. Tied
notes are also the only way to write a sound that starts in one measure (Section 5.1: Beats and Measures)
and ends in a dierent measure.
15
2
note: Ties may look like slurs , but they are not the same; a slur connects to notes with dierent
pitches
3 and is a type of articulation4 .
Figure 3.4: When these eight notes are played as written, only ve distinct notes are heard: one note
the length of two whole notes; then a dotted half note; then another note the same length as the dotted
half note; then a quarter note; then a note the same length as a whole note plus a quarter note.
Dots and ties give you much freedom to write notes of varying lengths, but so far you must build your notes
from halves of other notes. If you want to divide a note length into anything other than halves or halves of
halves - if you want to divide a beat into thirds or fths, for example - you must write the number of the
division over the notes. These unusual subdivisions are called borrowed divisions because they sound as
if they have been borrowed from a completely dierent meter (Chapter 8). They can be dicult to perform
correctly and are avoided in music for beginners. The only one that is commonly used is triplets, which
divide a note length into equal thirds.
2 "Articulation" <http://cnx.org/content/m11884/latest/#p1d>
3 "Pitch: Sharp, Flat, and Natural Notes" <http://cnx.org/content/m10943/latest/>
4 "Articulation" <http://cnx.org/content/m11884/latest/>
16 CHAPTER 3. DOTS, TIES, AND BORROWED DIVISIONS
Figure 3.5: Any common note length can be divided into an unusual number of equal-length notes
and rests, for example by dividing a whole note into three instead of two "half" notes. The notes are
labeled with the appropriate number. If there might be any question as to which notes are involved in
the borrowed division, a bracket is placed above them. Triplets are by far the most common borrowed
division.
Borrowed Duplets
Figure 3.6: In a compound meter (Chapter 8), which normally divides a beat into three, the borrowed
division may divide the beat into two, as in a simple meter. You may also see duplets in swing music.
Notes in jazzy-sounding music that has a "swing" beat are often assumed to be triplet rhythms, even when
they look like regular divisions; for example, two written eighth notes (or a dotted quarter-sixteenth) might
sound like a triplet quarter-eighth rhythm. In jazz and other popular music styles, a tempo (Chapter 11)
notation that says swing usually means that all rhythms should be played as triplets. Straight means to
play the rhythms as written.
note: Some jazz musicians prefer to think of a swing rhythm as more of a heavy accent on the
second eighth, rather than as a triplet rhythm, particularly when the tempo (Chapter 11) is fast.
This distinction is not important for students of music theory, but jazz students will want to work
hard on using both rhythm (Chapter 4) and articulation
5 to produce a convincing "swing".
5 "Articulation" <http://cnx.org/content/m11884/latest/>
17
Swing Rhythms
Figure 3.7: Jazz or blues with a "swing" rhythm often assumes that all divisions are triplets. The
swung triplets may be written as triplets, or they may simply be written as "straight" eighth notes or
dotted eighth-sixteenths. If rhythms are not written as triplets, the tempo marking usually includes an
indication to "swing", or it may simply be implied by the style and genre of the music.
note: Thanks to everyone who participated in the survey! It was very useful to me, both as a
researcher and as an author, to get a better picture of my readers' goals and needs. I hope to begin
updating the survey results module
6 in April. I will also soon begin making some of the suggested
additions, and emailed comments are still welcome as always.
Figure 3.8
Chapter 4
1
Rhythm
2 3 4
Rhythm, melody , harmony , timbre , and texture
5 are the essential aspects of a musical performance. They
are often called the basic elements of music. The main purpose of music theory is to describe various pieces
of music in terms of their similarities and dierences in these elements, and music is usually grouped into
genres based on similarities in all or most elements. It's useful, therefore, to be familiar with the terms
commonly used to describe each element. Because harmony is the most highly developed aspect of Western
6
music , music theory tends to focus almost exclusively on melody and harmony. Music does not have to
have harmony, however, and some music doesn't even have melody. So perhaps the other three elements can
be considered the most basic components of music.
Music cannot happen without time. The placement of the sounds in time is the rhythm of a piece of
music. Because music must be heard over a period of time, rhythm is one of the most basic elements of
music. In some pieces of music, the rhythm is simply a "placement in time" that cannot be assigned a beat
(Section 5.1: Beats and Measures) or meter (Chapter 8), but most rhythm terms concern more familiar
types of music with a steady beat. See Meter (Chapter 8) for more on how such music is organized, and
Duration (Chapter 1) and Time Signature (Chapter 5) for more on how to read and write rhythms. See
Simple Rhythm Activities
7 for easy ways to encourage children to explore rhythm.
Rhythm Terms
• Rhythm - The term "rhythm" has more than one meaning. It can mean the basic, repetitive pulse of
the music, or a rhythmic pattern that is repeated throughout the music (as in "feel the rhythm"). It
can also refer to the pattern in time of a single small group of notes (as in "play this rhythm for me").
• Beat - Beat also has more than one meaning, but always refers to music with a steady pulse. It may
refer to the pulse itself (as in "play this note on beat two of the measure (Section 5.1: Beats and
Measures)"). On the beat or on the downbeat refer to the moment when the pulse is strongest.
O the beat is in between pulses, and the upbeat is exactly halfway between pulses. Beat may also
refer to a specic repetitive rhythmic pattern that maintains the pulse (as in "it has a Latin beat").
Note that once a strong feeling of having a beat is established, it is not necessary for something to
happen on every beat; a beat can still be "felt" even if it is not specically heard.
• Measure or bar - Beats are grouped into measures or bars. The rst beat is usually the strongest,
and in most music, most of the bars have the same number of beats. This sets up an underlying
pattern in the pulse of the music: for example, strong-weak-strong-weak-strong-weak, or strong-weak-
weak-strong-weak-weak. (See Meter (Chapter 8).)
19
20 CHAPTER 4. RHYTHM
• Rhythm Section - The rhythm section of a band is the group of instruments that usually provide the
background rhythm and chords. The rhythm section almost always includes a percussionist (usually
on a drum set) and a bass player (usually playing a plucked string bass of some kind). It may also
include a piano and/or other keyboard players, more percussionists, and one or more guitar players
or other strummed or plucked strings. Vocalists, wind instruments, and bowed strings are usually not
part of the rhythm section.
• Syncopation - Syncopation occurs when a strong note happens either on a weak beat or o the beat.
8
See Syncopation .
note: Thanks to everyone who participated in the survey! It was very useful to me, both as a
researcher and as an author, to get a better picture of my readers' goals and needs. I hope to begin
updating the survey results module
9 in April. I will also soon begin making some of the suggested
additions, and emailed comments are still welcome as always.
8 "Syncopation" <http://cnx.org/content/m11644/latest/>
9 "A Survey of Users of Connexions Music Modules" <http://cnx.org/content/m34234/latest/>
Chapter 5
1
Time Signature
note: Are you really free to use this online resource? Join the discussion at Opening Measures
2 .
Figure 5.1: The time signature appears at the beginning of the piece of music, right after the clef
symbol and key signature.
Because music is heard over a period of time, one of the main ways music is organized is by dividing that
time up into short periods called beats. In most music, things tend to happen right at the beginning of
each beat. This makes the beat easy to hear and feel. When you clap your hands, tap your toes, or dance,
you are "moving to the beat". Your claps are sounding at the beginning of the beat, too. This is also called
being "on the downbeat", because it is the time when the conductor's baton
5 hits the bottom of its path
and starts moving up again.
Example 5.1
Listen to excerpts A, B, C and D. Can you clap your hands, tap your feet, or otherwise move "to
the beat"? Can you feel the 1-2-1-2 or 1-2-3-1-2-3 of the meter? Is there a piece in which it is easier
21
22 CHAPTER 5. TIME SIGNATURE
• A
6
• B
7
• C
8
• D
9
The downbeat is the strongest part of the beat, but some downbeats are stronger than others. Usually
a pattern can be heard in the beats: strong-weak-weak-strong-weak-weak, or strong-weak-strong-weak. So
beats are organized even further by grouping them into bars, or measures. (The two words mean the same
thing.) For example, for music with a beat pattern of strong-weak-weak-strong-weak-weak, or 1-2-3-1-2-3, a
measure would have three beats in it. The time signature tells you two things: how many beats there are
in each measure, and what type of note (Chapter 1) gets a beat.
Figure 5.2: This time signature means that there are three quarter notes (or any combination of notes
that equals three quarter notes) in every measure. A piece with this time signature would be "in three
four time" or just "in three four".
Most time signatures contain two numbers. The top number tells you how many beats there are in a measure.
The bottom number tells you what kind of note gets a beat.
Figure 5.3: In "four four" time, there are four beats in a measure and a quarter note gets a beat. Any
combination of notes that equals four quarters can be used to ll up a measure.
You may have noticed that the time signature looks a little like a fraction in arithmetic. Filling up
measures feels a little like nding equivalent fractions
10 , too. In "four four time", for example, there are four
beats in a measure and a quarter note gets one beat. So four quarter notes would ll up one measure. But
so would any other combination of notes that equals four quarters: one whole, two halves, one half plus two
quarters, and so on.
Example 5.2
If the time signature is three eight, any combination of notes that adds up to three eighths will ll
a measure. Remember that a dot (Chapter 3) is worth an extra half of the note it follows. Listen
11
to the rhythms in Figure 5.4.
Figure 5.4: If the time signature is three eight, a measure may be lled with any combination of notes
and rests that adds up to three eight.
A few time signatures don't have to be written as numbers. Four four time is used so much that it is often
calledcommon time, written as a bold "C". When both fours are "cut" in half to twos, you have cut
time, written as a "C" cut by a vertical slash.
Figure 5.5
You may have already noticed that a measure in four four time looks the same as a measure in two two.
After all, in arithmetic, four quarters adds up to the same thing as two halves. For that matter, why not
call the time signature "one one" or "eight eight"?
Figure 5.6: Measures in all of these meters look the same, but feel dierent. The dierence is how
many downbeats there are in a measure.
25
Or why not write two two as two four, giving quarter notes the beat instead of half notes? The music
would look very dierent, but it would sound the same, as long as you made the beats the same speed. The
music in each of the staves in Figure 5.7 would sound like this
13 .
Figure 5.7: The music in each of these staves should sound exactly alike.
So why is one time signature chosen rather than another? The composer will normally choose a time
signature that makes the music easy to read and also easy to count and conduct. Does the music feel like it
has four beats in every measure, or does it go by so quickly that you only have time to tap your foot twice
in a measure?
A common exception to this is six eight time, and the other time signatures (for example nine eight and
twelve eight) commonly used to write compound meters (Chapter 8). A piece in six eight might have six
beats in every measure, with an eighth note getting a beat. But it is more likely that the conductor will
give only two beats per measure, with a dotted quarter (or three eighth notes) getting one beat. Since beats
normally get divided into halves and quarters, this is the easiest way for composers to write beats that are
divided into thirds. In the same way, three eight may only have one beat per measure; nine eight, three
beats per measure; and twelve eight, four beats per measure.
Figure 5.8: In six eight time, a dotted quarter usually gets one beat. This is the easiest way to write
beats that are evenly divided into three rather than two.
Figure 5.9: These are only a few of the many, many possible note combinations that could be used in
these time signatures.
Chapter 6
In general, we more accurately gauge shorter periods than longer periods of time. For instance, the dierence
between the length of whole notes performed at a quarter note = 60 and then at 66 would be dicult to
discern. However, we can easily discern the dierence between sixteenth notes performed at those speeds,
four to a quarter-note beat. Our ability to perceive smaller increments of time can help us with the larger
time spans. By accumulating many smaller time spans we can accurate measure or perceive the larger ones.
Subdivision or subdividing refers to dividing the beat, most often silently, into smaller units. Tech-
nically speaking divisions are note values that divide beats (in 4/4 and 6/8 they are eighth notes) and
subdivisions are note values that further divide divisions (in 4/4 and 6/8 they are sixteenth notes). Infor-
mally, however, most performing musicians use the term subdivision to describe counting note values smaller
than the beat. Usually these note values are eighth or sixteenth notes. The ability to subdivide while
performing music ensures rhythmic accuracy and is an important skill that all musicians need to develop.
Simple meters (2/4, 3/4, 4/4 etc.) generally feature subdivisions of the beat in four parts. In the gure
below please notice that the sixteenth notes form subdivisions of all of the larger value notes:
27
28 CHAPTER 6. INTRODUCTION TO SUBDIVISIONS IN SIMPLE METERS
Figure 6.1
Below is an example with subdivisions: the upper part is aligned with sixteenth note subdivisions in the
lower part:
Figure 6.2
29
The rst step to internalizing the subdivisions is to beat out a steady pattern of sixteenth notes while
playing a melody line. For instance, while tapping 16th notes with a hand or foot try singing or saying the
upper part with ta or la for each note. This may take a little bit of practice.
Try tapping out eighth notes while performing these simple patterns:
Figure 6.3
When you are able to perform the rhythms accurately with tapping, try to then perform them accurately
by internally hearing the taps. When I subdivide I usually do so with internal tapping sounds rather
than counting 1 ee and ah, 2 ee and ah. The internal tapping works better with more complex rhythms or
faster subdivisions.
When you have mastered the above examples with eighth notes, try subdivisions of sixteenth notes. Here
are some further examples to practice with sixteenth note subdivisions:
30 CHAPTER 6. INTRODUCTION TO SUBDIVISIONS IN SIMPLE METERS
Figure 6.4
Figure 6.5
Figure 6.6
The sixteenth notes at numbers 1 and 2 appear rhythmically accurate; at least they are positioned so
that they don't intersect the eighth note lines. However, if we subdivide the example with sixteenth notes
(presented in the green and blue lines) we notice that the rhythmic placement at number 2 is not accurate:
Figure 6.7
The sixteenth at number 1 coincides with the sixteenth note pulse (blue line) but the sixteenth at number
2 clearly is not centered with the appropriate sixteenth note pulse. The slight rhythmic sloppiness is hardly
noticeable with eight note divisions but becomes quite obvious with the sixteenth note subdivisions.
Thus, the smaller and more frequent the rhythmic subdivisions, the more accurately the rhythms can
be scrutinized. For this reason, musicians with the highest degree of rhythmic accuracy have the greatest
mastery of very rapid subdivisions.
32 CHAPTER 6. INTRODUCTION TO SUBDIVISIONS IN SIMPLE METERS
The rule of thumb is to pick the smallest value of subdivision you can internally hear when you perform.
Chapter 7
1
Simple and Compound Time Signatures
Figure 7.1
In simple time signatures the top number represents the number of beats per measure. The bottom
number indicates the type of note equal to one beat. The division of the beat is the lower number multiplied
by 2. Thus, the division of the beat is grouped by twos.
Figure 7.2
33
34 CHAPTER 7. SIMPLE AND COMPOUND TIME SIGNATURES
Figure 7.3
In compound time signatures the top number divided by 3 represents the number of beats per measure.
The bottom number indicates the type of note that divides the beat. The division of the beat is grouped by
threes.
Figure 7.4
The meter of a piece of music is the arrangment of its rhythms in a repetitive pattern of strong and weak
beats. This does not necessarily mean that the rhythms themselves are repetitive, but they do strongly
suggest a repeated pattern of pulses. It is on these pulses, the beat (Section 5.1: Beats and Measures) of the
music, that you tap your foot, clap your hands, dance, etc.
Some music does not have a meter. Ancient music, such as Gregorian chants; new music, such as some
experimental twentieth-century art music; and Non-Western music, such as some native American ute
music, may not have a strong, repetitive pattern of beats. Other types of music, such as traditional Western
African drumming, may have very complex meters that can be dicult for the beginner to identify.
But most Western
2 music has simple, repetitive patterns of beats. This makes meter a very useful way
3
to organize the music. Common notation , for example, divides the written music into small groups of beats
called measures, or bars (Section 5.1: Beats and Measures). The lines dividing each measure from the next
help the musician reading the music to keep track of the rhythms (Chapter 4). A piece (or section of the
piece) is assigned a time signature (Chapter 5) that tells the performer how many beats to expect in each
measure, and what type of note (Chapter 1) should get one beat. (For more on reading time signatures,
please see Time Signature (Chapter 5).)
Conducting
4 also depends on the meter of the piece; conductors use dierent conducting patterns for the
dierent meters. These patterns emphasize the dierences between the stronger and weaker beats to help
the performers keep track of where they are in the music.
But the conducting patterns depend only on the pattern of strong and weak beats. In other words, they
only depend on "how many beats there are in a measure", not "what type of note gets a beat". So even
though the time signature is often called the "meter" of a piece, one can talk about meter without worrying
about the time signature or even being able to read music. (Teachers, note that this means that children can
be introduced to the concept of meter long before they are reading music. See Meter Activities
5 for some
suggestions.)
Meters can be classied by counting the number of beats from one strong beat to the next. For example,
if the meter of the music feels like "strong-weak-strong-weak", it is in duple meter. "strong-weak-weak-
35
36 CHAPTER 8. METER IN MUSIC
strong-weak-weak" is triple meter, and "strong-weak-weak-weak" is quadruple. (Most people don't bother
classifying the more unusual meters, such as those with ve beats in a measure.)
simple meter, each beat is basically
Meters can also be classied as either simple or compound. In a
divided into halves. Incompound meters, each beat is divided into thirds.
A borrowed division occurs whenever the basic meter of a piece is interrupted by some beats that
sound like they are "borrowed" from a dierent meter. One of the most common examples of this is the use
of triplets (p. 15) to add some compound meter to a piece that is mostly in a simple meter. (See Dots, Ties,
and Borrowed Divisions (Chapter 3) to see what borrowed divisions look like in common notation.)
Meters
Figure 8.1: Remember that meter is not the same as time signature; the time signatures given here are
just examples. For example, 2/2 and 2/8 are also simple duple meters.
note: Thanks to everyone who participated in the survey! It was very useful to me, both as a
researcher and as an author, to get a better picture of my readers' goals and needs. I hope to begin
updating the survey results module
18 in April. I will also soon begin making some of the suggested
additions, and emailed comments are still welcome as always.
Introduction to Subdivisions in
1
Compound Meters
39
CHAPTER 9. INTRODUCTION TO SUBDIVISIONS IN COMPOUND
40
METERS
Figure 9.1
First perform the following by tapping eighth notes while singing the melody with Ta or La or playing
it on your instrument.
41
Figure 9.2
Once you have mastered that exercise, try to hear the tapping internally. Play the upper line while
hearing the tapping.
Try this example in 6/8 with sixteenth note subdivisions:
Figure 9.3
A good rule of thumb is to subdivide with the smallest note value possible. If the example above was
performed at a slow tempo, eighth note = 60, then subdivisions with 32
nd notes would be quite possible
and would help to ensure proper note values. At a tempo of dotted quarter note = 100, sixteenth note
subdivisions would be preferred. This new tempo would be too rapid to subdivide easily with 32
nd notes.
2
Here are some further examples to subdivide with sixteenth notes (Wedge , p. 165):
Figure 9.4
Chapter 10
1
Pickup Notes and Measures
Figure 10.1: Normally, a composer who wants to put more or fewer beats in a measure must change
the time signature, as in this example from Mussorgsky's Boris Godunov.
There is one common exception to this rule. (There are also some less common exceptions not discussed
here.) Often, a piece of music does not begin on the strongest downbeat (p. 22). Instead, the strong beat
that people like to count as "one" (the beginning of a measure), happens on the second or third note, or
even later. In this case, the rst measure may be a full measure that begins with some rests. But often the
rst measure is simply not a full measure. This shortened rst measure is called a pickup measure.
If there is a pickup measure, the nal measure of the piece should be shortened by the length of the
pickup measure (although this rule is sometimes ignored in less formal written music). For example, if the
meter (Chapter 8) of the piece has four beats, and the pickup measure has one beat, then the nal measure
should have only three beats. (Of course, any combination of notes and rests can be used, as long as the
total in the rst and nal measures equals one full measure.
43
44 CHAPTER 10. PICKUP NOTES AND MEASURES
Figure 10.2: If a piece begins with a pickup measure, the nal measure of the piece is shortened by the
length of the pickup measure.
Any phrase
3 of music (not just the rst one) may begin someplace other than on a strong downbeat. All the
notes before the rst strong downbeat of any phrase are the pickup notes to that phrase.
Figure 10.3: Any phrase may begin with pickup notes. Each of these four phrases begins with one or
two pickup notes. (You may listen to the tune here4 ; can you hear that the pickup notes lead to the
stronger downbeat?)
A piece that is using pickup measures or pickup notes may also sometimes place a double bar
5 (with
or without repeat signs) inside a measure, in order to make it clear which phrase and which section of the
music the pickup notes belong to. If this happens (which is a bit rare, because it can be confusing to read),
there is still a single bar line where it should be, at the end of the measure.
Figure 10.4: At the ends of sections of the music, a measure may be interrupted by a double bar that
places the pickup notes in the correct section and assures that repeats have the correct number of beats.
When this happens, the bar line will still appear at the end of the completed measure. This notation
can be confusing, though, and in some music the pickups and repeats are written in a way that avoids
these broken-up measures.
note: Thanks to everyone who participated in the survey! It was very useful to me, both as a
researcher and as an author, to get a better picture of my readers' goals and needs. I hope to begin
updating the survey results module
6 in April. I will also soon begin making some of the suggested
additions, and emailed comments are still welcome as always.
The tempo of a piece of music is its speed. There are two ways to specify a tempo. Metronome markings are
absolute and specic. Other tempo markings are verbal descriptions which are more relative and subjective.
Both types of markings usually appear above the sta, at the beginning of the piece, and then at any spot
where the tempo changes. Markings that ask the player to deviate slightly from the main tempo, such as
ritardando (Gradual Tempo Changes, p. 49) may appear either above or below the sta.
Metronome markings are given in beats per minute. They can be estimated using a clock with a second
hand, but the easiest way to nd them is with a metronome, which is a tool that can give a beat-per-minute
tempo as a clicking sound or a pulse of light. Figure 11.1 shows some examples of metronome markings.
47
48 CHAPTER 11. TEMPO
Figure 11.1
Metronomes often come with other tempo indications written on them, but this is misleading. For
example, a metronome may have allegro marked at 120 beats per minute and andante marked at 80 beats
per minute. Allegro should certainly be quite a bit faster than andante, but it may not be exactly 120 beats
per minute.
A tempo marking that is a word or phrase gives you the composer's idea of how fast the music should
feel. How fast a piece of music feels depends on several dierent things, including the texture and complexity
of the music, how often the beat gets divided into faster notes, and how fast the beats themselves are (the
metronome marking). Also, the same tempo marking can mean quite dierent things to dierent composers;
if a metronome marking is not available, the performer should use a knowledge of the music's style and genre,
and musical common sense, to decide on the proper tempo. When possible, listening to a professional play
the piece can help with tempo decisions, but it is also reasonable for dierent performers to prefer slightly
dierent tempos for the same piece.
Traditionally, tempo instructions are given in Italian.
1. un poco allegro
2. molto meno mosso
3. piu vivo
4. molto adagio
5. poco piu mosso
Of course, tempo instructions don't have to be given in Italian. Much folk, popular, and modern music,
gives instructions in English or in the composer's language. Tempo indications such as "Not too fast", "With
energy", "Calmly", or "March tempo" give a good idea of how fast the music should feel.
If the tempo of a piece of music suddenly changes into a completely dierent tempo, there will be a new
tempo given, usually marked in the same way (metronome tempo, Italian term, etc.) as the original tempo.
Gradual changes in the basic tempo are also common in music, though, and these have their own set of
terms. These terms often appear below the sta, although writing them above the sta is also allowed.
These terms can also appear with modiers (More useful Italian, p. 49) like molto or un poco. You may
notice that there are quite a few terms for slowing down. Again, the use of these terms will vary from one
composer to the next; unless beginning and ending tempo markings are included, the performer must simply
use good musical judgement to decide how much to slow down in a particular ritardando or rallentando.
note: Thanks to everyone who participated in the survey! It was very useful to me, both as a
researcher and as an author, to get a better picture of my readers' goals and needs. I hope to begin
updating the survey results module
2 in April. I will also soon begin making some of the suggested
additions, and emailed comments are still welcome as always.
Keywords are listed by the section with that keyword (page numbers are in parentheses). Keywords
do not necessarily appear in the text of the page. They are merely associated with that section. Ex.
apples, 1.1 (1) Terms are referenced by the page they appear on. Ex. apples, 1
L larghetto, 11(47)
study, 6(27), 9(39)
subdivision, 6(27), 9(39)
largo, 11(47)
swing, 16
lento, 11(47)
Syncopation, 20
Attributions
Module: "Rhythm"
By: Catherine Schmidt-Jones
URL: http://cnx.org/content/m11646/1.7/
Pages: 19-20
Copyright: Catherine Schmidt-Jones
License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Module: "Tempo"
By: Catherine Schmidt-Jones
URL: http://cnx.org/content/m11648/1.9/
Pages: 47-51
Copyright: Catherine Schmidt-Jones
License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Music Fundamentals 2: Rhythm and Meter
This collection is the second of ve dealing with the rudiments of music.
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