time signature question
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- KVRAF
- 2163 posts since 17 Jan, 2008
hopefully this question isn't too dumb. I have been making a beat and it doesn't seem to be in 4/4; I'm an idiot at time signatures and can't figure out what it is. not that it matters too much, but it's getting to be a pain in the butt figuring out where to place accents on the piano roll. was hoping someone could help me figure it out:
1 ee and a 2 ee and a 3 ee and a 4 ee and a 5 ee and a 6 ee and a sev en and a 8 ee and a
1 ee and a 2 ee and a 3 ee and a 4 ee and a 5 ee and a 6 ee and a sev en and a 8 ee and a
i only wrote it that way as I remember a drummer I used to play with counted like that. if that's not helpful I'll bounce out a bit and stick on soundcloud or something. thanks.
1 ee and a 2 ee and a 3 ee and a 4 ee and a 5 ee and a 6 ee and a sev en and a 8 ee and a
1 ee and a 2 ee and a 3 ee and a 4 ee and a 5 ee and a 6 ee and a sev en and a 8 ee and a
i only wrote it that way as I remember a drummer I used to play with counted like that. if that's not helpful I'll bounce out a bit and stick on soundcloud or something. thanks.
macbook pro 2.88 GHz Intel Core Duo, 10 gigs ram, 750GB HD, Logic Studio 9
my blog and some music:
http://rabbitearsmotel.wordpress.com/
my blog and some music:
http://rabbitearsmotel.wordpress.com/
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- KVRian
- 588 posts since 3 Oct, 2011
I think you'll have to bounce it to be sure, but if that's how you're counting it, then you've got a 4/4 beat. Try omitting the "ee" and the "a" when you count and see if that makes more sense.
1 and 2 and 3 and 4 and...
It should feel twice as fast.
1 and 2 and 3 and 4 and...
It should feel twice as fast.
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 2163 posts since 17 Jan, 2008
thanks. i'll bounce it out.
macbook pro 2.88 GHz Intel Core Duo, 10 gigs ram, 750GB HD, Logic Studio 9
my blog and some music:
http://rabbitearsmotel.wordpress.com/
my blog and some music:
http://rabbitearsmotel.wordpress.com/
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- Banned
- 12367 posts since 30 Apr, 2002 from i might peeramid
given the mnemonic, i'd expect the rhythm is 12th notes, not 16ths or 8ths..
3 12th notes = 1 quarter note
swing rhythms often use notes on the first and the third and omit the 2nd step.. eg. XoX XoX, i believe the "1 ee and a" is a count of 6, or half a measure.
always do your own counting
3 12th notes = 1 quarter note
swing rhythms often use notes on the first and the third and omit the 2nd step.. eg. XoX XoX, i believe the "1 ee and a" is a count of 6, or half a measure.
always do your own counting
you come and go, you come and go. amitabha neither a follower nor a leader be tagore "where roads are made i lose my way" where there is certainty, consideration is absent.
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- KVRian
- 588 posts since 3 Oct, 2011
Triplets are usually counted "1 and uh" or "1 trip-let". "1 ee and a", if it's how the OP is counting, is certainly 16th notes (4 counts per 1/4 note). It might be swung, but that doesn't change how it's counted.xoxos wrote:given the mnemonic, i'd expect the rhythm is 12th notes, not 16ths or 8ths..
3 12th notes = 1 quarter note
swing rhythms often use notes on the first and the third and omit the 2nd step.. eg. XoX XoX, i believe the "1 ee and a" is a count of 6, or half a measure.
always do your own counting
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 2163 posts since 17 Jan, 2008
i really need to read a book on this stuff. i can play pretty much anything by ear, but this stuff makes me feel like an idiot. 
macbook pro 2.88 GHz Intel Core Duo, 10 gigs ram, 750GB HD, Logic Studio 9
my blog and some music:
http://rabbitearsmotel.wordpress.com/
my blog and some music:
http://rabbitearsmotel.wordpress.com/
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- KVRian
- 588 posts since 3 Oct, 2011
Nonsense. There's nothing about learning a skill that makes you an idiot. I still have more to learn, myself.michael2 wrote:i really need to read a book on this stuff. i can play pretty much anything by ear, but this stuff makes me feel like an idiot.
Reading a book probably won't help you. Just get a reference and practice counting rhythms by clapping your hands.
http://www.philtulga.com/counter.html
http://www.studybass.com/lessons/rhythm ... t-rhythms/
Always count out loud. Get a metronome or some other way of hearing a steady beat. Focus on practicing this for 5 minutes every day. You'll be surprised how much you understand in a week's time.
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 2163 posts since 17 Jan, 2008
thanks, that's good advice. i will look for something that I can do in the car. has to be an app available.Nanakai wrote:Nonsense. There's nothing about learning a skill that makes you an idiot. I still have more to learn, myself.michael2 wrote:i really need to read a book on this stuff. i can play pretty much anything by ear, but this stuff makes me feel like an idiot.
Reading a book probably won't help you. Just get a reference and practice counting rhythms by clapping your hands.
http://www.philtulga.com/counter.html
http://www.studybass.com/lessons/rhythm ... t-rhythms/
Always count out loud. Get a metronome or some other way of hearing a steady beat. Focus on practicing this for 5 minutes every day. You'll be surprised how much you understand in a week's time.
macbook pro 2.88 GHz Intel Core Duo, 10 gigs ram, 750GB HD, Logic Studio 9
my blog and some music:
http://rabbitearsmotel.wordpress.com/
my blog and some music:
http://rabbitearsmotel.wordpress.com/
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- KVRist
- 439 posts since 7 Mar, 2011 from Pleasanton, CA
Metronome for iOS by Frozen Ape Pty. is marvelous.
Seasoned IT vet, Mac user, and lover of music. Always learning.
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 2163 posts since 17 Jan, 2008
awesome. thanks a bunch.wesleyt wrote:Metronome for iOS by Frozen Ape Pty. is marvelous.
macbook pro 2.88 GHz Intel Core Duo, 10 gigs ram, 750GB HD, Logic Studio 9
my blog and some music:
http://rabbitearsmotel.wordpress.com/
my blog and some music:
http://rabbitearsmotel.wordpress.com/
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- KVRer
- 14 posts since 12 Mar, 2013 from USA
One, two, three, four = 1/4 notes
One and two and three and four and = 1/8th notes
One e and ah two e and ah three e an ah four e and ah = 16th notes
Triplets are like da-da-da, da-da-da, da-da-da, da-da-da
One and two and three and four and = 1/8th notes
One e and ah two e and ah three e an ah four e and ah = 16th notes
Triplets are like da-da-da, da-da-da, da-da-da, da-da-da
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 2163 posts since 17 Jan, 2008
haha. that much I know. it's the odd time signatures that confuse me. I can play it, get into it, appreciate it, but when someone says 5/8, I have no idea what they are counting.waveheavy wrote:One, two, three, four = 1/4 notes
One and two and three and four and = 1/8th notes
One e and ah two e and ah three e an ah four e and ah = 16th notes
Triplets are like da-da-da, da-da-da, da-da-da, da-da-da
i'll get that metronome app tonight.
macbook pro 2.88 GHz Intel Core Duo, 10 gigs ram, 750GB HD, Logic Studio 9
my blog and some music:
http://rabbitearsmotel.wordpress.com/
my blog and some music:
http://rabbitearsmotel.wordpress.com/
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- KVRer
- 16 posts since 4 Dec, 2012
[quote="michael2"]
haha. that much I know. it's the odd time signatures that confuse me. I can play it, get into it, appreciate it, but when someone says 5/8, I have no idea what they are counting.
i'll get that metronome app tonight.[/quote]
Compound or odd meters are usually counted in it's smallest possible forms. 5/8 for example is either counted 12345(8th note bpm) or 12,123(=5) or 123,12 or 12121121211 but that's just the plain time signature with 5 rhythmic values per measure(one per beat). As soon as you get more subdivisions you use the standard 1e+a(one ee and ah)or whatever the subdivision is. Counting odd signatures isn't hard at all, it does require some practice but in essence you make it into comprehensible components by applying the kind of thinking described above.
Some phrasing or stress of accents is often taken into account when "shortening" odd signatures. Say you have something like 7/8, you can count this 123,1234 or 1234,123 or 1212123 or 1212312 or 1231212 each having their own feels depending on where you put the "1"'s. You do that by looking more closely at what the rhythmic content is, or how the musical phrase is layed out(for example if a phrase has 7 8th notes in 7/8, three of them are raising the pitch going up (Re-Mi-Fa) and four down(Fa-Mi-Re-Do) you'd count that 123,1234 or 123,1212).
Hope that helps.
haha. that much I know. it's the odd time signatures that confuse me. I can play it, get into it, appreciate it, but when someone says 5/8, I have no idea what they are counting.
i'll get that metronome app tonight.[/quote]
Compound or odd meters are usually counted in it's smallest possible forms. 5/8 for example is either counted 12345(8th note bpm) or 12,123(=5) or 123,12 or 12121121211 but that's just the plain time signature with 5 rhythmic values per measure(one per beat). As soon as you get more subdivisions you use the standard 1e+a(one ee and ah)or whatever the subdivision is. Counting odd signatures isn't hard at all, it does require some practice but in essence you make it into comprehensible components by applying the kind of thinking described above.
Some phrasing or stress of accents is often taken into account when "shortening" odd signatures. Say you have something like 7/8, you can count this 123,1234 or 1234,123 or 1212123 or 1212312 or 1231212 each having their own feels depending on where you put the "1"'s. You do that by looking more closely at what the rhythmic content is, or how the musical phrase is layed out(for example if a phrase has 7 8th notes in 7/8, three of them are raising the pitch going up (Re-Mi-Fa) and four down(Fa-Mi-Re-Do) you'd count that 123,1234 or 123,1212).
Hope that helps.
- KVRAF
- 16806 posts since 8 Mar, 2005 from Utrecht, Holland
That looks straight forward. My guess is that the time signature is just 4/4 but you have accents or syncopation which is not reflected in the text.michael2 wrote:1 ee and a 2 ee and a 3 ee and a 4 ee and a 5 ee and a 6 ee and a sev en and a 8 ee and a
Can you post a small mp3 file how this beat sounds?
We are the KVR collective. Resistance is futile. You will be assimilated. 
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 2163 posts since 17 Jan, 2008
that does help. I think it is one of those things that I do unconsciously and need to learn why and how. as i get older and lose any desire to be a professional musician, I have grown more interested in what makes things tick; developing a method to the madness can't be a bad thing.vincenti wrote:Compound or odd meters are usually counted in it's smallest possible forms. 5/8 for example is either counted 12345(8th note bpm) or 12,123(=5) or 123,12 or 12121121211 but that's just the plain time signature with 5 rhythmic values per measure(one per beat). As soon as you get more subdivisions you use the standard 1e+a(one ee and ah)or whatever the subdivision is. Counting odd signatures isn't hard at all, it does require some practice but in essence you make it into comprehensible components by applying the kind of thinking described above.michael2 wrote: haha. that much I know. it's the odd time signatures that confuse me. I can play it, get into it, appreciate it, but when someone says 5/8, I have no idea what they are counting.
i'll get that metronome app tonight.
Some phrasing or stress of accents is often taken into account when "shortening" odd signatures. Say you have something like 7/8, you can count this 123,1234 or 1234,123 or 1212123 or 1212312 or 1231212 each having their own feels depending on where you put the "1"'s. You do that by looking more closely at what the rhythmic content is, or how the musical phrase is layed out(for example if a phrase has 7 8th notes in 7/8, three of them are raising the pitch going up (Re-Mi-Fa) and four down(Fa-Mi-Re-Do) you'd count that 123,1234 or 123,1212).
Hope that helps.
that's exactly what was happening. I muted a few parts and it looped perfectly.BertKoor wrote:That looks straight forward. My guess is that the time signature is just 4/4 but you have accents or syncopation which is not reflected in the text.michael2 wrote:1 ee and a 2 ee and a 3 ee and a 4 ee and a 5 ee and a 6 ee and a sev en and a 8 ee and a
Can you post a small mp3 file how this beat sounds?
macbook pro 2.88 GHz Intel Core Duo, 10 gigs ram, 750GB HD, Logic Studio 9
my blog and some music:
http://rabbitearsmotel.wordpress.com/
my blog and some music:
http://rabbitearsmotel.wordpress.com/