polyrhythms

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rachmiel wrote:pop quiz: what famous song by what famous rock group has 4/4 playing against 3/4? hints: k, lz. (no fair looking it up on the web!) :-)
Meaning the basic rhythm is 3/4 and someone plays 4/4 against it?

Dave Brubeck, but he's neither rock, nor a group.

Victor.

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> the basic rhythm is 3/4 and someone plays 4/4 against it

yes. or vice-versa, depending on your point of view. :-)

brubeck might have done it, but it's not the classic rock group and song i had in mind.

hint for group: heavy hydrogen.
hint for song: sweater ...

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rachmiel wrote:> the basic rhythm is 3/4 and someone plays 4/4 against it

yes. or vice-versa, depending on your point of view. :-)

brubeck might have done it, but it's not the classic rock group and song i had in mind.

hint for group: heavy hydrogen.
hint for song: sweater ...
Led Zeppelin

Kashmir.

Guitar riff in 3/4 Drums in 4/4.

Do I win?

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herodotus wrote:Kashmir.
Don't have a recording, and it's not on iTunes, so from memory....

Are you talking about that descending riff? That's 3+3+3+3+2+2 eighth notes. Nothing really polyrhythmic.

Ok, you're probably talking about that tadada guitar rhythm. Right, that's 3/4, but the quarter note is the same as of the drum, so it's not what's commonly called "3 against 4". Meaning: not "3 in the time of 4".

Here, 4 against 3: the main ryhthm is 3/4, but bass and bass drum play in 4.

Victor.

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> Led Zeppelin Kashmir

give that man a bronze monkey! :-)

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VicDiesel wrote:
herodotus wrote:Kashmir.

Ok, you're probably talking about that tadada guitar rhythm. Right, that's 3/4, but the quarter note is the same as of the drum, so it's not what's commonly called "3 against 4". Meaning: not "3 in the time of 4".
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herodotus wrote: cute illustration that one part plays 3 quarter notes in the time of 3 quarter notes of the other part
Thanks for making my point.

Did that link in my post work for you? It was a link to the iTunes store.

Victor.

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VicDiesel wrote:
herodotus wrote: cute illustration that one part plays 3 quarter notes in the time of 3 quarter notes of the other part
Thanks for making my point.
Did I?

I was just doodling.

But whatever your point, at least two people (Rachmiel and myself) regard Kashmir as illustrating a polyrhythm.

Though one should note that these phenomena are not well documented, so the nomenclature is still working itself out.
Did that link in my post work for you? It was a link to the iTunes store.


It just brought me to the iTunes home page.

I am afraid I have never been to iTunes much, so I don't really know how to navigate the site.

Was it supposed to bring me to a particular track?

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herodotus wrote:Was it supposed to bring me to a particular track?
Yeah. Jean-Luc Ponty, album: Tchokola, track: N' Fan Mot. Cute African polyrhythm of true 3 over 4.

Victor.

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@rachmiel: Kashmir by Zep.
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Toxikator wrote:@rachmiel: Kashmir by Zep.
Phew! How did you guess?
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Now with improved MIDI jitter!

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I know, I hit reply and got distracted by YouTube...
and then by the time I hit post two pages had appeared :P

What I was TRYING to find was the greatest example of polyrhythms of all time:

It's MATH!
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rachmiel wrote:pop quiz: what famous song by what famous rock group has 4/4 playing against 3/4? hints: k, lz. (no fair looking it up on the web!) :-)
There is one Led Zeppelin song that sounds kind of like that, but not sure, I'd have to figure it out on paper to see how the notes fall. "Black Dog" is the one I am thinking of. Am I close?

Another one that is real cool (by the way) is "The Attitude Song" by Steve Vai. He plays the main riff in 7/16, but the backing part, drums, etc. is 4/4.

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Examigan wrote:Another one that is real cool (by the way) is "The Attitude Song" by Steve Vai. He plays the main riff in 7/16, but the backing part, drums, etc. is 4/4.
I think Vai was with Zappa when Frank recorded Ya Hozna, which has a 5/4 shifting against 6/4.

Btw, nothing beats Bill Bruford who playing on his own a 15/8 rhythm against a 2/4 hi-hat. My mind would explode, trying to do that.

Also btw, all this is child's play compared to what happens in Indian percussion music.

Victor.

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> all this is child's play compared to what happens in Indian percussion music

yes. :-)

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