R
RAMI
Guest
I can't believe you music theologians haven't figured this out yet.![]()
It's like watching 3 dogs trying to fuck a football.


I can't believe you music theologians haven't figured this out yet.![]()
It's like watching 3 dogs trying to fuck a football.![]()
![]()
It's nowhere near as important as it looks like we're making it. We were actually doing ok until some guy did a drive-by with a 15 paragraph post that made no sense, while he had this "Let me educate you" attitude. He then proceeded to show he knows nothing about the subject. I just hate mis-information and I will call it out whether people like it or not. I got no problem bantering with Gekko about it because I respect him, even if I think he's wrong in this particular case. At least he's coherent in his wrongness.It's just nice to know that while I don't know shit about time signatures, at least I'm not alone.![]()
I just hate mis-information and I will call it out whether people like it or not.
Preach it, Brutha!
I've tried to follow all of the posts in this thread, but at this point, I think you have all gone loopy with your oopappas, prime time, etc. No offense meant...just an observation and I've enjoyed the humor.
This is NOT in 4/4. I'm sorry, but you can't just put a metronome up to some music to find the signature. Just because it fits with the beat and seems to follow the beats doesn't mean it's correct.
You could make this work in 8/8, but then you'd want to lower that into 4/4 and the feel just isn't there for a signature of 4/4. If you try it in 4/4, those eighth notes keep moving from beat to beat in each successive measure and that's just crazy for someone to try and play off of sheet music.
This fits better in a 5/4 signature. That allows the two eighth notes to stay in the same area though out the piece and it has a better feel to it, for the musicians that are going to play it. It's all in the phrasing.
If you are just looking for some midi signature to match it up with other tracks, I guess 4/4 might work in that case, but if you want to be correct and have it come out playable by people who actually can read music, it's 5/4.
You don't believe me? Check out the Mission Impossible Theme by Burt Bacarach against this. That song is in 5/4. Check it out for yourself. Check the feel of the beat of this sample while humming the Mission Impossible Theme along with it. You have to slow the Impossible Theme down a bit, but it fits.
Dave Brubeck's Take Five is another example. Again, you have to slow it down a bit to match the sample in this thread, but it fits. It's 5/4.
Thank you. That's exactly it.Assuming you're talking about the original post in this thread, it is ABSOLUTELY in 4/4. It's actually an incredibly simple syncopation.
If you can make this fit in 5/4, then you've rewritten the laws of nature.
There are 16 16th notes in a measure of 4/4. This riff is simply accenting the following 16th notes:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
In 5/4, there are 20 16th notes in a measure. There are not 20 16th notes in this riff.
Again, this is a very simple syncopation device, very similar to the "Bo Diddley beat," aka clave or son clave, all of which are in 4/4, even though they accent off beats at times.
That's the definition of syncopation.
Assuming you're talking about the original post in this thread, it is ABSOLUTELY in 4/4. It's actually an incredibly simple syncopation.
If you can make this fit in 5/4, then you've rewritten the laws of nature.
There are 16 16th notes in a measure of 4/4. This riff is simply accenting the following 16th notes:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
In 5/4, there are 20 16th notes in a measure. There are not 20 16th notes in this riff.
Again, this is a very simple syncopation device, very similar to the "Bo Diddley beat," aka clave or son clave, all of which are in 4/4, even though they accent off beats at times.
That's the definition of syncopation.
I can see you're ignoring me for some reason, but I'll respond to you anyway. I have to think that being ignored means that someone can't refute my points...or they just don't want to acknowledge my points for some reason.One of the points I made earlier was along these lines: If you hear a repeating riff of, say, six notes, and if there is no musical information other than these notes, how can you tell what the underlying rhythm is, i.e. whether the notes form two 3/4 bars, or one 6/8 bar, or are a pair of triplets in a 4/4/ bar?
Yeah, it's 4/4 with a triplet feel.
You could maybe claim that it's in something like 5/4 with each of those slow triplet notes being a beat, but that's just needlessly obfuscating it.
I can see you're ignoring me for some reason, but I'll respond to you anyway. I have to think that being ignored means that someone can't refute my points...or they just don't want to acknowledge my points for some reason.
You don't need "context" or more musical information. Did you listen to the recording of me counting to this from 2 pages ago? There's no disputing that it's a simple 4/4, especially after hearing me effortlessly counting to it. There's no changing that. That is what it is.
4/4. Very basic music theory.
That's simply not true. You don't ever need to hear "extra musical information" to determine the time signature of a certain pattern. The rest of the song might go into 7/4, then 5/4, then 3/4, etc....That doesn't change the fact that THIS part of the song, THIS pattern is in 4/4. Many songs change time signatures within the same song. But each part, and for that matter each bar can have it's own time signature. You don't need to hear the rest of the piece. This pattern is what it is. The rest of the song does not affect that.I've been making a more general point, which is that without extra musical information you may think that a selection of notes (not necessarily the OP's) has a particular time signature, when further information might reveal something else.
Attached is the 5/4 beat. Keep in mind, I was putting each note on the down beat.
OK, going back and reading some of these posts...this one in particular, I now understand what everybody is talking about. Not having anything else to go on, I was putting each note on a down beat and that then gives you a 5/4 pattern. Even my sister, a music teacher and several of her friends who are professional orchestral musicians were feeling it the same way. I myself have 3 years of college theory.
But this morning, she said she changed her mind. I don't know what changed her mind, but she still believes it could be written either way, 5/4 or 4/4. It all depends on what else you are going to put with it. This clip alone really isn't enough to go on.
To put it in 4/4, you have to kind of syncopate the notes instead of playing them all on the down beat. That's where the triplets feel was coming from that other people were mentioning. That then puts the two eighth notes on the fourth beat of the measure, and the next note is the first beat of the next measure and so on.
Putting it in 5/4 does make it seem pretty dry once you see how it is in 4/4. 5/4 isn't incorrect as much as 4/4 is better, because it shows the feel of the clip. Maybe all of my education got in the way?
Attached is the 5/4 beat. Keep in mind, I was putting each note on the down beat.
I myself have 3 years of college theory.
Just what is your education in music theory that you can say I'm wrong? I'm not saying you're wrong, I'm just saying it depends on how you count it. I think you're being a little bit rude and there's no need for that.You and your sister are both 100% wrong. This is in 4/4. Plain and simple. Stop trying to cloud it and complicate it. There are no triplets in this, and if you think there are, you have no business trying to preach music theory to anyone. It simply has some accents, that doesn't make them triplets. You also don't need to hear the "rest of the piece", and if you think you do, you know nothing about music theory.
This is4/4. Stop spreading mis-information. You're demonstrating an extreme lack of knowledge of basic music theory. Go bak and couple of pares and listen to the clip of my counting to this.
It's 4/4, and it will always be4/4.
Incredible, just incredible.
Rami.....
![]()