Confused about 2/4 time
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- KVRist
- 260 posts since 14 Mar, 2008
I'm studying the basics of music theory again, before I thought 4/4 would be 4 quarter notes in a measure, or 6/8 would be 6 8th notes in a measure, but if I do 2/4 that would be 2 quarter notes in a measure but here is where I am confused. A whole note should be 2 beats and fill up the measure, half would take 2 half notes to fill up the measure, and then half again would take up 4 quarter notes to make a measure, so the system just broke right there because it wouldn't be 2 quarter notes to be 2/4 it would be 4 quarter notes. I'm confused.
- KVRAF
- 1794 posts since 9 Apr, 2011
It would still be 2 quarter notes. 2/4 means two beats per measure, and each beat is a quarter note. Therefore a half note would be an entire measure, and whole notes wouldn't exist.
"musician."
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- KVRian
- 909 posts since 26 Nov, 2005
It is what it is. 2/4 is two quarter notes per measure. End of story. That means you can also use one half note, or four eighth notes, or a combination as long as they add up to two beats. You cannot use a whole note because it has four beats or a dotted half note because that has three beats. This isn't broken. This is how it words.cj31387 wrote:I'm studying the basics of music theory again, before I thought 4/4 would be 4 quarter notes in a measure, or 6/8 would be 6 8th notes in a measure, but if I do 2/4 that would be 2 quarter notes in a measure but here is where I am confused. A whole note should be 2 beats and fill up the measure, half would take 2 half notes to fill up the measure, and then half again would take up 4 quarter notes to make a measure, so the system just broke right there because it wouldn't be 2 quarter notes to be 2/4 it would be 4 quarter notes. I'm confused.
You will find it gets more complicated when you deal with compound time like 6/8 or complex time like 7/8, but that is for another topic.
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 260 posts since 14 Mar, 2008
That is exactly what got me confused. I thought well this way is right BUT, then a whole note can't exist. It seemed weird to me that a whole note could not exist and that's what got me confused. But yeah I am doing rests right now actually. For my homework I'm supposed to complete a bar in rests using all the rests but I got to 2/4 time and realized I couldn't use a whole rest. But Jancivil can you elaborate on how a whole rest can be used in any measure? Its probably as simple as it just can but is there a reason?
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- KVRian
- 576 posts since 15 Apr, 2004 from Sweden
2/4 is a very strange idea since it's often just 4/4 with a subtle nuance that's not really verifiable other than as some arbitrary esoteric agreement which you should buy into to be A Musicion.
bleh
- KVRAF
- 12204 posts since 7 Sep, 2006 from Roseville, CA
A whole (semibreve) rest is used in all time signatures to denote a full bar of rest, except 4/2, in which case you would use a double-whole (breve) rest.
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- KVRAF
- 12204 posts since 7 Sep, 2006 from Roseville, CA
Not necessarily. The difference typically lies in the way that notes are emphasized. In 4/4 time, the first beat (downbeat) gets the most emphasis, followed by a weak 2nd beat, a moderate emphasis on the 3rd beat, and a weak 4th beat. In contrast, 2/4 time consists of a strong downbeat and weak second beat. Try counting it out loud:qa2pir wrote:2/4 is a very strange idea since it's often just 4/4 with a subtle nuance that's not really verifiable other than as some arbitrary esoteric agreement which you should buy into to be A Musicion.
4/4: 1 2 3 4
2/4: 1 2 1 2
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- KVRAF
- 26033 posts since 20 Oct, 2007 from gonesville
I don't think there is any reasoning to be had. it's conventional. I personally have used a breve rest for 4/2 but I've seen a whole rest. I guess if you wanted to make an argument for it 'a whole measure rest'.cj31387 wrote:That is exactly what got me confused. I thought well this way is right BUT, then a whole note can't exist. It seemed weird to me that a whole note could not exist and that's what got me confused. But yeah I am doing rests right now actually. For my homework I'm supposed to complete a bar in rests using all the rests but I got to 2/4 time and realized I couldn't use a whole rest. But Jancivil can you elaborate on how a whole rest can be used in any measure? Its probably as simple as it just can but is there a reason?
- KVRAF
- 26033 posts since 20 Oct, 2007 from gonesville
qa2pir wrote:2/4 is a very strange idea since it's often just 4/4 with a subtle nuance that's not really verifiable other than as some arbitrary esoteric agreement which you should buy into to be A Musicion.
for instance, indicating the right feel: conducting 2/4 is down, up. the downbeat might be said to properly fall every two quarters; vs 4/4 where the conductor describes a diamond: down, left, right, up. The composer made a decision for a reason. You aren't privy to it, but you have decided it's meaningless? If I while I'm improvising a solo have conceptions of four quarter note beats as 2 x 2/4, 4/4, 2/2, or something else, it informs my phrasing and thought.
a person that's had this experience as a musician should not have your problem with the conception of this. You're using cute language (and the snotty tone) again to make yourself seem smart in an area of your particular ignorance. Doesn't work, trust me on that.
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- KVRAF
- 1585 posts since 13 Nov, 2005 from St. Paul
as others have noted, any performer who can't recognize and convey the difference in feel between 2/4 and 4/4 should turn in his union card.
- KVRist
- 425 posts since 23 Aug, 2012 from Way Out West
cryophonik wrote:Not necessarily. The difference typically lies in the way that notes are emphasized. In 4/4 time, the first beat (downbeat) gets the most emphasis, followed by a weak 2nd beat, a moderate emphasis on the 3rd beat, and a weak 4th beat. In contrast, 2/4 time consists of a strong downbeat and weak second beat. Try counting it out loud:qa2pir wrote:2/4 is a very strange idea since it's often just 4/4 with a subtle nuance that's not really verifiable other than as some arbitrary esoteric agreement which you should buy into to be A Musicion.
4/4: 1 2 3 4
2/4: 1 2 1 2
This is absolutely not true. What about breakbeat and/or reggae where the off-beats are accentuated/emphasized (syncopation)?
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- KVRian
- 1115 posts since 6 Jul, 2009
It wouldn't be a special or notable effect if it wasn't going against the natural tendency. It is true.Hooj wrote:cryophonik wrote:Not necessarily. The difference typically lies in the way that notes are emphasized. In 4/4 time, the first beat (downbeat) gets the most emphasis, followed by a weak 2nd beat, a moderate emphasis on the 3rd beat, and a weak 4th beat. In contrast, 2/4 time consists of a strong downbeat and weak second beat. Try counting it out loud:qa2pir wrote:2/4 is a very strange idea since it's often just 4/4 with a subtle nuance that's not really verifiable other than as some arbitrary esoteric agreement which you should buy into to be A Musicion.
4/4: 1 2 3 4
2/4: 1 2 1 2
This is absolutely not true. What about breakbeat and/or reggae where the off-beats are accentuated/emphasized (syncopation)?
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For all of you having trouble with this, stand up and physically perform the differences between the time signatures; this is not hard, and is something you should have addressed in grade school.
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- KVRian
- 576 posts since 15 Apr, 2004 from Sweden
lemme just say i think you're really transcending the barriers of whatever function time signatures have in music. they're a common framework, not a detailed instruction. emphasis on beat isn't dependent on features linearly determined by time signature. 2s and 4ths is as common as 1s and 3rds. it's all the same time signature. whether you wish to call it 4/4 or 2/4 or 1/4 isn't important. what matters is coherence.
bleh
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- KVRAF
- 7851 posts since 20 Jan, 2008
Reggie is not 2/4 Time it's 4/4 The accents are placed on the up (and) beatHooj wrote:cryophonik wrote:Not necessarily. The difference typically lies in the way that notes are emphasized. In 4/4 time, the first beat (downbeat) gets the most emphasis, followed by a weak 2nd beat, a moderate emphasis on the 3rd beat, and a weak 4th beat. In contrast, 2/4 time consists of a strong downbeat and weak second beat. Try counting it out loud:qa2pir wrote:2/4 is a very strange idea since it's often just 4/4 with a subtle nuance that's not really verifiable other than as some arbitrary esoteric agreement which you should buy into to be A Musicion.
4/4: 1 2 3 4
2/4: 1 2 1 2
This is absolutely not true. What about breakbeat and/or reggae where the off-beats are accentuated/emphasized (syncopation)?
'
OneANDTwoANDthreeANDFourAND
The determination of where the accent is laid is not accounted for in the time signature. Although generally when learning 4/4 an accent is placed on the One so you remember where you are in the beat. A straight 8 has no accents it's just 8th notes. Rock and Trad jazz frequently emphasis the 2 and 4 beats while still being considered 4/4 time.
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