no you see thats the point, 12/8 and 6/4 are not the same, sure mathematically and visually they are, but MUSICALLY they are not. 12/8 is compound time, basically meaning you feel the rhythm in three's, 6/4 is standard time so you feel the rhythm in two's.jancivil wrote:Since you're being strictly from argumentative, hey!:
IF the math works to where the thing/the idea lands on ONE, how is any of this different, objectively?
12/8, sure as shootin, = 6/4, at the self-same tempo. Difference between 6/8 and 12/8 is 'how many bars per phrase'. Triplets in 4/4 = 12/8, therefore Triplets in 2/4 = 6/8. Two dotted quarters {6/8} only differs from 2 quarters 2/4 in terms of tempo, when you get right down to it.
In terms of your sequencer, which is objective, what's the diff, was my point, and you can't refute it.
(when you need to translate to a person, you probably need some subjective criteria, sure)
you count 12/8 '1' 2 3 '4' 5 6 '7' 8 9 '10' 11 12
you count 6/4 '1' 2 '3' 4 '5' 6
the AB guide to music theory describes it this way, 3/4 (similar to 6/4) is like saying
dont forget to catch the train, ie DUH duh DUH duh DUH duh DUH
and 6/8 (similar to 12/8) is like saying
Phone me as soon as your there, ie
DUH duh duh DUH duh duh DUH.
mathematically this difference is nothing, but musically its a big difference, especially for people playing the piece in question.
