Need help with detecting time signatures.
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- KVRist
- 206 posts since 30 Dec, 2006 from North of Antartica
Ok...I have been playing guitar for many years, but always to the tune of my own drum...which there in lies the problem.
I have never known how to determine what time signature I am playing in. I either learned songs (when I first started playing) after that I learned scales, some basic theory for harmony/chord construction, but never how to play in a different time signature...well, to be more exact, how to count what time I am playing in.
I was in a band for a number of years and our drummer would always let us (the rest of the band) know what time we were in, and that was fine...but now I am not playing with a drummer...and I guess I think in a 4/4 universe.
I was trying to play to a drum beat, but I was always one beat off...and was told by a co-writer of the project "its because you are playing the verse in 5 and the chorus in 4."
So...the quick and dirty: how do I count my beats? If that is not clear...how do I know im counting right? Yes, I can count...but how DO you count the beats? If that makes sense.
I was hoping for a laymans answer to this...
I mean...I tend to write (based on my band days) in 4/4, 5/4 and 6/8
But I dont know when I am and when I am not.
I hope I made all of this clear.
Thanks in advance by the way
I have never known how to determine what time signature I am playing in. I either learned songs (when I first started playing) after that I learned scales, some basic theory for harmony/chord construction, but never how to play in a different time signature...well, to be more exact, how to count what time I am playing in.
I was in a band for a number of years and our drummer would always let us (the rest of the band) know what time we were in, and that was fine...but now I am not playing with a drummer...and I guess I think in a 4/4 universe.
I was trying to play to a drum beat, but I was always one beat off...and was told by a co-writer of the project "its because you are playing the verse in 5 and the chorus in 4."
So...the quick and dirty: how do I count my beats? If that is not clear...how do I know im counting right? Yes, I can count...but how DO you count the beats? If that makes sense.
I was hoping for a laymans answer to this...
I mean...I tend to write (based on my band days) in 4/4, 5/4 and 6/8
But I dont know when I am and when I am not.
I hope I made all of this clear.
Thanks in advance by the way
- KVRAF
- 16797 posts since 8 Mar, 2005 from Utrecht, Holland
4/4: One and Two and Three and Four and ...
6/8: One ta ta Two ta ta ...
3/4: One and Two and Three and ...
5/4: One and Two and Three and One and Two and ...
or: One and Two and One and Two and Three and ...
or when it's faster like in Brubeck's "Take Five": One two three One two ...
7/8: One two One two One two three ...
Others will do it differently though.
6/8: One ta ta Two ta ta ...
3/4: One and Two and Three and ...
5/4: One and Two and Three and One and Two and ...
or: One and Two and One and Two and Three and ...
or when it's faster like in Brubeck's "Take Five": One two three One two ...
7/8: One two One two One two three ...
Others will do it differently though.
We are the KVR collective. Resistance is futile. You will be assimilated. 
My MusicCalc is served over https!!
My MusicCalc is served over https!!
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- KVRian
- 514 posts since 11 Jun, 2005 from Western Third of the shire of the Horse Bay
4/4: one two three four (fast); one and two and three and four and (slow)
6/8: one two (very fast); one and a two and a (fast); one...six (slow)
I tend not to play in 6/8 and probably wouldn't count one through six now if I did (see below)
12/8, assuming it's triplet feel 4/4: one two three four (very fast); one and a two and a etc
3/4: same as other /4 signatures, but the number of the counting shall be 3
any-odd-integer/8: broken down into units of 2 and 3 and count either "apples" or "galloping" respectively, or "taka" and "takita" respectively. (You can also count takadimi for a group of 4, which can be less tongue-tieing when things get really fast
)
The section of a piece I'm fiddling with at the moment is a slowish 13/8 with the rhythm taka taka takita takita takita on fingerpicked acoustic guitar.
6/8: one two (very fast); one and a two and a (fast); one...six (slow)
I tend not to play in 6/8 and probably wouldn't count one through six now if I did (see below)
12/8, assuming it's triplet feel 4/4: one two three four (very fast); one and a two and a etc
3/4: same as other /4 signatures, but the number of the counting shall be 3
any-odd-integer/8: broken down into units of 2 and 3 and count either "apples" or "galloping" respectively, or "taka" and "takita" respectively. (You can also count takadimi for a group of 4, which can be less tongue-tieing when things get really fast
The section of a piece I'm fiddling with at the moment is a slowish 13/8 with the rhythm taka taka takita takita takita on fingerpicked acoustic guitar.
And it is as it is and we take as we find / Always next season's buds on the bough / But I'll never find a better time / Hard though it is to allow / I'll never find a better time / To be alive than now
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- KVRAF
- 8389 posts since 11 Apr, 2003 from back on the hillside again - but now with a garden!
As a drummer, I NEVER count odd time sigs in combinations of twos and threes... Sometimes it could help in getting the accents, but then why not just speak the accent of the proper number any way.
Also, I've never understood folk who actually say '1 e and a', rather than '1 uh and a'
takes all sorts.
Reason for not splitting up time sig counting into 2s and 3s is so that you keep the full appreciation of how a bar is structured, and where you currently are in it. If you're in 11/8, counting 4 twos and a three, or two fours and a three may totally hide what is happening in the bar, and it's very easy to get lost ('did I just do a four before?'). Admittedly when it gets over 10, I often go alphabetic to keep the syllables down; but often at that point you tend to follow a feel, rather than trying to intuit numerically.
For working stuff out, easiest thing is to record it, and listen back without the pressure of performance - do one job at a time. Once you have counted around to where the accent repeats come and have it nailed, then play it again counting. Getting someone else to count when you are playing may sometimes be necessary, but get them to do it quietly at first, otherwise you could easily be distracted and play something different causing problems of both listening and performance! Been there, done that, lesson now being shared!
HTH
DSP
Also, I've never understood folk who actually say '1 e and a', rather than '1 uh and a'
Reason for not splitting up time sig counting into 2s and 3s is so that you keep the full appreciation of how a bar is structured, and where you currently are in it. If you're in 11/8, counting 4 twos and a three, or two fours and a three may totally hide what is happening in the bar, and it's very easy to get lost ('did I just do a four before?'). Admittedly when it gets over 10, I often go alphabetic to keep the syllables down; but often at that point you tend to follow a feel, rather than trying to intuit numerically.
For working stuff out, easiest thing is to record it, and listen back without the pressure of performance - do one job at a time. Once you have counted around to where the accent repeats come and have it nailed, then play it again counting. Getting someone else to count when you are playing may sometimes be necessary, but get them to do it quietly at first, otherwise you could easily be distracted and play something different causing problems of both listening and performance! Been there, done that, lesson now being shared!
HTH
DSP
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- KVRian
- 514 posts since 11 Jun, 2005 from Western Third of the shire of the Horse Bay
For me, that e would take longer to pronounce (internally or aloud) than the other three and wouldn't work at all.duncanparsons wrote:'1 e and a'
I was taught 1 a and a, but wi' my accent uh and a amahnt to t'same thing anywayduncanparsons wrote:'1 uh and a'
Counting in groups of 2 and 3 helps me appreciate and feel the structure - before I learnt that I couldn't count unusual time sigs at all and found counting 1 to X to be cumbersome because it gave no hint of the structure. I think it's the ability of this method to help with the accentuation which is useful for me. But then I'm a barely-a-guitarist and barely-a-keyboard player and don't even attempt to play drumsduncanparsons wrote:Reason for not splitting up time sig counting into 2s and 3s is so that you keep the full appreciation of how a bar is structured, and where you currently are in it.
Maybe a drummer has a different perspective on it, maybe it's just that you have a different perspective on it and just happen to also be a drummer.
I'm not sure I understand your point about hiding what is happening in the bar, but I'm with you on following the feel. When I was first messing about with the abovementioned acoustic guitar riff I was counting all 13 beats in groups of 2 and 3, now I just feel the long and short pulses that those groupings imply, with no counting of numbers at all.duncanparsons wrote:If you're in 11/8, counting 4 twos and a three, or two fours and a three may totally hide what is happening in the bar, and it's very easy to get lost ('did I just do a four before?'). Admittedly when it gets over 10, I often go alphabetic to keep the syllables down; but often at that point you tend to follow a feel, rather than trying to intuit numerically.
I might give your alphabetic method a try some time, it sounds interesting. It might work for me, it might not. But I reckon that is the crux of the matter: there are going to be loads of different ways of counting and not every method is going to be helpful to everyone, it's a question of what works for you.
And it is as it is and we take as we find / Always next season's buds on the bough / But I'll never find a better time / Hard though it is to allow / I'll never find a better time / To be alive than now
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 206 posts since 30 Dec, 2006 from North of Antartica
Thanks guys, this does help out a lot...
And I like the record it first approach...and then count it. I think I would get jummbled up if I tried counting while playing.
And I like the record it first approach...and then count it. I think I would get jummbled up if I tried counting while playing.
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- Skunk Mod
- 21249 posts since 10 Jun, 2004 from Pony Pasture
Fair warning: Anybody violating the guidelines given in this thread risks having their time signature replaced with the "I broke the KVR time sig rules" graphic.
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- KVRian
- 514 posts since 11 Jun, 2005 from Western Third of the shire of the Horse Bay
Meffy wrote:Fair warning: Anybody violating the guidelines given in this thread risks having their time signature replaced with the "I broke the KVR time sig rules" graphic.
And it is as it is and we take as we find / Always next season's buds on the bough / But I'll never find a better time / Hard though it is to allow / I'll never find a better time / To be alive than now
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- KVRAF
- 8389 posts since 11 Apr, 2003 from back on the hillside again - but now with a garden!
- addled muppet weed
- 111253 posts since 26 Jan, 2003 from through the looking glass
jancivil wrote:cause, eg., '7' is a two-syllable word?duncanparsons wrote:... why not just speak the accent of the proper number any way.
as is four.
in yorkshire anyway, its pronounced foo-eh
- KVRAF
- 26033 posts since 20 Oct, 2007 from gonesville
see, I remember when I was little, people would count '7/4' with that se-ven, so it now be 8/4.
Indian musicians tend to locate 'tala' as combos of twos and threes, in any case.
I heard some character on The Sopranos pronounce 'whore' as who-er.
Indian musicians tend to locate 'tala' as combos of twos and threes, in any case.
I heard some character on The Sopranos pronounce 'whore' as who-er.
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- KVRAF
- 1718 posts since 3 Sep, 2003
I usually pretty good at this, but this is one that has eluded me for years.
The monkey island theme.
( )
I seems easy at first, but listen to the lead line..
The monkey island theme.
( )
I seems easy at first, but listen to the lead line..
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- KVRian
- 1480 posts since 14 Jun, 2003
3/4: oom pah pah
how does a rock band count 7? one two three four five six se-ven!
how does a rock band count 7? one two three four five six se-ven!
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- KVRAF
- 1718 posts since 3 Sep, 2003
Keep counting. Try counting it through to the chorus.Tony Ostinato wrote:3/4: oom pah pah
Edit: Just looked at some guitar tabs that has it pegged as a 4/4, but that will drift too. I figure that for the correct count, the lead segments should all start at a one.
