This is the best explanation with examples of this subject I've ever seen. I finally understand the differences between these. I love the explanation of the differences and similarities between 2/2 and 4/4 and how they both have a strong first beat followed by weaker beats - I never thought of it that way. I think this is why pop/rock music starts with a crash cymbal on the first beat. You are right they should call the marching beat 2/2 as 2/4 but as you say it's traditional so it's stuck. I think the Vader theme from Star Wars is probably 2/2 as is any death march, funeral dirge, etc, because these are marching procession songs (left right left right) and the notes that follow are not as strong as the notes that accompany each step in the march. 4/4 time is actually similar in this regard but slightly more sophisticated. This makes a lot of sense. Thanks for the extremely informative and enlightening video!
Very informative - with examples! Thank you.
THis is the best explanation I've ever heard!! Thank you so so much!!
K .. m k n..m mk .j.jmnñ hhh hh h k kh k h h k h h h h h h h h h nk h hñ .hh hhķh n h. . Kkmkkkkkķķ. .. ..... k mm
My favourite Frenchman on TH-cam.
This is the best explanation with examples of this subject I've ever seen. I finally understand the differences between these. I love the explanation of the differences and similarities between 2/2 and 4/4 and how they both have a strong first beat followed by weaker beats - I never thought of it that way. I think this is why pop/rock music starts with a crash cymbal on the first beat. You are right they should call the marching beat 2/2 as 2/4 but as you say it's traditional so it's stuck. I think the Vader theme from Star Wars is probably 2/2 as is any death march, funeral dirge, etc, because these are marching procession songs (left right left right) and the notes that follow are not as strong as the notes that accompany each step in the march. 4/4 time is actually similar in this regard but slightly more sophisticated. This makes a lot of sense. Thanks for the extremely informative and enlightening video!
Is there any practical difference between 3/4 & 3/8 Time Signature?
When everyone is doing the same thing at the same time (ex; the beginning of Astor Piazolla's 'Libertango'), what TEXTURE are we listening to?
Monophonic
Homophonic
Heterophonic
Polyphonic
Great video!! Thank you very much!
What would be useful to convey timing is play the same song but with different signatures. How would they sound different?
I think it would simply change which notes get accented (as the downbeats and upbeats will fall on different notes).
Actually, here is the answer to your question: th-cam.com/video/N2urVIiIB7I/w-d-xo.html
Merci for this.
Very educating
Very clear
Thanks 👍
Extremely helpful, thanks for making this!
cool, very helpful
Thanks u really let me understood something
What is the time signature of the intro song playing. Is it 4/4 or 5/8?
Good Video. Thanks
Da da da da daaaaaa
I kid, thanks for this
great
Nice video thanks
THANK U I HAD AN F IN BAND
no hablo ingles pero si le entiendo
ohhhh Iam suck at music but ty :)