Tigran Hamasyan’s crazy polymetric time signatures
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 16 มิ.ย. 2024
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Tigran Hamasyan is a Armenian jazz pianist well known for his use of odd and unusual time signatures. Tigran himself has described his track "Entertain Me" from the 2015 album Mockroot as being in a meter of 256 beats per bar! But how does that actually work in practice?! Let's take a closer look at the different layers of complexity in the meter of this amazing piece of music.
The outro music to this video is my track "The Longest March" which you can hear in full on Spotify: open.spotify.com/artist/0wKKJ... 🎶
SOURCES:
Tigran Hamasyan, Mockroot, track by track: www.nonesuch.com/albums/mockroot
“Entertain Me” drum tab: musescore.com/user/32829620/s...
Arthur Hnatek performing “Entertain Me”: • Arthur Hnatek "Enterta...
“Entertain Me” piano transcription: • Tigran Hamasyan - Ente...
“Entertain Me” visual analysis: • a JazzShuggah song: Ti...
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0:00 Introduction
0:22 "Entertain Me" by Tigran Hamasyan
2:08 35/16 time
3:30 5/16 & 3/16 time
4:32 Pianote
5:30 the drum polymeter!
9:29 Conclusion
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I love these odd and complex time signature videos! I hope you will explore sometime the rich music of Eastern Europe and the Balkans, particularly that of the Gypsies. The Time Signatures and Poly-Rythms of this music is fascinating and hypnotic. Thank you for doing such a great job!
Proof that everything is in 4/4 if you don't count like a nerd
💯 😁
or count like a drummer. Well... a drummer's arms
You mean like how you can count "Take Five" as "one...two...three-four"
Damn I was just saying that :D :D :D
@@scabbaraeor waltz for that matter
I love that during half the lines, it sounds like David is about to break out laughing
Justifiably so
ikr
Yes! This song is bananas and I love it.
Bro just invented 16 bars of 4/4
Joke(?)
Lmao literally the first thing I thought.
@@svcjunior5526well 16 times 16 is 256....
@@jayrussell3796 yes, it is
@@svcjunior5526 except dude broke it down into all kinds of weird time 35/7, 35/3 ...wtf
This is basically Meshuggah played on a piano, and I love it.
Tigran is directly inspired by Meshugga. If you want to understand Tigran's work then Meshugga will greatly help
Meshuggah the metal band?
@@lautaroortiz5935yes
@@lautaroortiz5935yup
@@lautaroortiz5935 No the romantic composer
@@bregottmannen2706ngl this is how Meshuggah and Periphery would play this song lol
Me (the band's new drummer): So what song are we going to practice?
The band: We need you to count to 256 every bar. Don't mess up!
Me: *literally dies*
The band: Oh, and the tempo is 240 bpm. Ready? :))))
Who clicked the like button when it had 256 likes?! 🤦
Zappa: ‘hey ur not feeling the 256/16’
What a convenient and extremely useful way to notate a song incredible stuff david
He did it to get attention.
@@hifijohnwell yeah of course he wants attention. People don’t make educational videos like this for themselves to watch
@@hifijohnugh just like how authors write books for people to read them 🙄
@@hifijohn Wtf is this comment what does it even mean
. @Grimnoire Wow are people really this dumb ,the artist created this stupid and awkward time signature to get attention,songs in 4/4 are dime a dozen but create a weird time signature or a song with a very very long title and its bound to get someones attention and you get some cheap publicity out of.
David in 2020: Songs that use 7/4 time
David in 2023:
55 likes and no reply? Let me fix that.
You forgot to make your own song in that polymeter at the end.
Performance wise, it’s not practical to write songs in out of the world time signatures
Every Tigran song is just 4/4 with some weird accents and that's why I love it, weird time signatures can sometimes be just complexity for the sake of it, but this weird times kinda emerge organically from his style of composition
Mmm, seems more like complexity for the sake of it to me. It's the only thing remotely notable about this. Pretentious and pointless.
@@maverator the way he composes those things is that he thinks of macropaterns, so he probably just played with some frases using 5s and 3s and arived at the 35/16 frase, played it a couple of times and realized he could make it fit a 4/4 grid if he played one bar of 11 every 7 bars
It's not like he sat in front of the piano and figured he would make a 256/16 song because he's so smart, it just emerged naturally from his style of using groups of 5,3,7 etc.
There a very good David Bruce video where he talks with a guy that works with tigran and he explains more how it's actually not that complicated
@@maverator So you're saying this complexity adds nothing? You don't think it creates a feel completely different from normal time signatures or even odd time signatures without a polymeter? Yeah that's ridiculous. You may not like it but a lot of people do and the complexity isn't at all just for the sake of it
Levitation 21 is FAR from just 4/4 with weird accents. Lots of polymeter and other shenanigans in that song.
@@maverator very pointless comment
Seeing Tigran, Arthur Hnatek, and Evan Marien (and Tosin) perform this album in it's entirety, outdoors in a beautiful amphitheatre in summer 2022, is definitely one of the greatest concerts of my life 😁🙏
the drummer is the insane one here. standing ovation for this sitting man
Tigran is one of my absolute favorites, and so is Meshuggah. It's so cool to see these polymeter tropes influence and be achieved by other artists. This kinda stuff jams and grooves so hard!
It's interesting to point out the similarity to Meshuggah, since a lot of their stuff is also basically just 4/4 with a bunch of weird accents and timing thrown in.
@@timg2727 It's not really a secret that Tigran listens to Meshuggah, you can find that online from interviews. This song specifically follows the general Meshuggah formula for polymeter riffs over 4/4, and it does it really well. On the surface, it seems quite silly for me to compare somebody like Tigran to a band like Meshuggah because of how different the vibes are, but this one really checks out when you do the math :)
Even though Tigran apparently says this himself, I feel it might be in a slightly joking manner. This song, like every single Meshuggah song, and most of Tigran's music, should be primarily be understood as 4/4 against a polymeter which after some ammount of 4/4 bars corrects itself with a tail to fit and start over.
I know that this is exactly what David points out in the video aswell, but I don't think anyone playing this song will feel the subdivisions as any sort of main pulses, but merely as a shifting motif. The superb drummer @Yogev Gabay (who has played with Tigran in a brief colab at Berkley) has made a ton of videos of how Meshuggah (and Tigran) does this, see for example his video on the "Meshuggah Calculator" th-cam.com/video/96BpxIx8rDc/w-d-xo.html
Thank you, this is exactly what I wanted to add (Meshuggah, Yogev).
4/4 is the "master" here, and every 16 bars, the odd 35 (5+5+5+5+3+3+3+3+3) pattern is cut short, forced to realign.
It sounded like he was saying that 256 is the "common denominator" between the drums and piano. So 256 beats will need to go by before the drums and piano line up on beat 1 again
David you just found the musical version of a run-on sentence!
I love Tigran; as a drummer I was hoping you’d mention the 4/4 “simplicity” of the poly-meter.
This is actually the song that introduced me to Tigran! Awesome to see a video breaking down his insanely nerdy and complex music
Mockroot is such a blast. Love that album.
That's wild. The whole song just sounds like a crazy ride.
I'm so glad he's finally getting talked about more.... i've been listening to him for 6 years and I'm so glad it was you that covered him in depth!!
Yes! This is the Tigran analysis I've needed my whole life. Top notch content, as usual
Thanks David and Tigran, you've _Entertain(ed) Me_ 🤗
Your videos do exactly what this song title says! And your piece at the end sounds so soothing!
This is such an awesome song! Thanks for showing it to me, David!
That song is making my head hurt legit! Very interesting video and surprisingly not clickbated at all. I love your channel, you are one of the only music theory TH-camrs who actually make it interesting and fun to learn!!
The 35/16 subdivision is what I heard immediately (of course without recognizing the exact number of beats). - I think the composer must fancy the powers of 2 (256 = 2^8; 16 = 2^4)! Well, there is a strong general relationship between mathematics and music.
Id say it's more likely that it just happened to be 256 because it is a multiple of 4. I haven't seen much in 2/4
I was just blasting this in the car the other day and trying to recall something David Bruce had made about Tigran’s rhythms. I can’t follow it properly even as a mere listener (never mind as a performer!), but now with your video’s simplifying benefit, maybe I’ll get there. Cheers, David!
That was a real eye-opener! Thanks for your good work!
Tigran makes amazing music, big fan. And yeah, his time signatures do get a bit wacky from time to time…
I love his music too! I really need more music that can be described as "math jazz"; it's so neat
this is madness ! love it
By far one of my favourite tracks off one of my favourite albums, so heavy but clean
256/16? Don't be square. Just say it's in 16 and that's it.
You fool! 16 is still square. Just say it's in 4 and be done with it.
@@Chigger but 4 is still square too! This should never have been divided into sixteenths in the first place. It's all about the eighth power.
@@whycantiremainanonymous8091 XD
You clearly arent a musician
@@Ctacobell There's always that one commenter who takes your joke seriously...
Meshuggah has basically done the exact same thing on every song since 1998, Tigran is very much inspired by their rhythmic style in his music
Thanks for covering one of Tigrans songs! I love his work
One of my favorite Tigran songs
That's a really great explanation. Thank you.
Don't matter how often you upload, keep making dope content. Liked and subbed
Mockroot is my favourite Tigran album, it is hard as any rock music and swings like Tarzan. His genius is astounding. I love Nate Wood on drums with Tigran but when he partners with Arthur Hnatek, as he does here, it's otherworldly.
Time signatures and meters are really subjective, his songs contain phrases that are this long, yes, indeed but can be easily counted, as you say, in smaller chunks. Saying 256:16 is a real wanky way to say na-na-nana-naaa, bitches! But it's true. :D
I think the most amazing aspect of a huge number of his non solo songs is how each member also counts and plays the phrasing in completely separate time from Tigran's main melody. Road Song is a great example, you can listen to it from start to finish twice and count it in 4:4 the first time and 6:8 the second time through, hearing a completely different song, both of which are correct. This genius composing is just nonchalantly littered throughout all of his work, the guy is a robot. Their live performances are nothing short of magic.
The Grid/Out Of The Grid, from this same album is another great set. And that title! These people are living metronomes and eat grids before breakfast.
Great video as always David!
Tigran live was an amazing experience ❤
And finally, at 9:58, I can relax a little with Mr. Bennett's usual lighter melodies. Ahhh... relief from the freneticism. 🙂
as I was getting motion sick watching the bar stagger along, I kept hoping you would zoom out so I could see the whole bar. It made the sinking feeling in my stomach worth it when you zoomed out and I could see the hole bar.
Now I have that kookie little pattern stuck in my head. Thanks David. Lol
I was obsessed with this topic in 2006 and made a whole album exploring different time possibilities including ideas like pentuplets and septuplets, and anti-time, but I had very insensitive ears at that time, playing in the experimental sound design idm& industrial realms kinda had me musically seeing the forest for the trees, so that album isn't very easy to listen to..
Sounds like a primitive computer got loaded up with a futuristic ai script that can be interpreted by old machines which make them sentient but this computer had a virus and so now the computer lives in a consciously compromised state.
This makes me want to get back into rhythm-centric experiments.
Great videos. Keep up the great work David.
Good stuff as always bro!
The Meshuggah calculator says hi! Using konnakol is really useful for stuff like this!
Omg, this is a marvellous exposé !!!
David, tu es le meilleur des professeurs.
I perfectly know about all of this. But it is overwhelming fun to hear you getting us tru all this theorics.
Parfois, after all these years of music, on devient amorphe et désintéressé... David, tu me redonnes le goût à la théorie musicale et c'est avec un plaisir immense que je consomme.chacune de tes vidéos
...
😎👍
David Bruce Composer introduced me to Tigran a couple of years ago, and now Im a big fan.
i absolutely love this song (and everything tigran does) but always wondered what was going on. Great video, would have been nice to hear the whole thing slowed way down to help hear these patterns a bit better
I love how the 4/4 on the drums was supposed to be this big plot twist but my silly little percussionist self immediately locked onto the hi-hat during the initial playthrough and went "Hey, isn't this just 4/4 with extra math?"
10 minutes that passed by in 4 min. Hahaha. When the video is good, it's never long. Thank you for bringing this video.
the key of this song is that Tigran is a total genius
I thought it was f# minor
Esto me recuerda a Politik de Coldplay. Es una canción que siempre se transcribe o la enseñan con la métrica de 4/4; sin embargo, la sensación de ritmo que te da la canción es muy diferente, se siente más a una métrica de 16/8. Este 16/8 puede contener pequeñas métricas amalgamas como 3/8+4/8, y al combinarlo con el 4/4 de la batería, al final, da una sensación de escuchar un polímetro. Una gran canción; pero, lástima que nadie habla de ella
In see Tigran, I click.
And listen ❤
Tigran is great. I discovered him last year. The album Mockroot that the track is on is worth a listen for anyone who likes prog jazz.
Laugh die. Keep up the good work David 💪🏻 Key signatures King
Anyone who's listened to enough Meshuggah will hear the hi hat and snare going "tss tss pam tss" on repeat and go "Hey, that's 4/4 !" and they'd be right ;)
Yeah I love Tigran Hamasyan
Nice Job
2 minutes into the video and i gotta say...... this song gave me HELLA UNDERTALE VIBES......
the moment i see the math and explanations coming up at 2:36 is the moment my brain explodes 🤯🤯
And that is where these mixed time signatures work so well - when juxtaposed with a constant to provide ebb and flow - in and out of sync, and seems to be a common thing. I think the alternate groups of 5/16 and 3/16 captures the feel of this section best - and that's the purpose right?, communicating music in written form.
I removed bar lines from my piano sheets 150 years ago
I saw this thumbnail last night and I actually dreamed of a song that has this one bar in the song where it's like 15/16 and I was like, aaah I rembere this song although I never heard it. Now I see the video and just understood that 256/16 is perfectly dividable and there is no reason to count like this. It's just a polyrhythm.
#1 by Animal Collective is in 7/4 with the drums in 4/4. One of my favorite polymeters, it's very smooth
I'm one for odd time signatures, but this is ridiculous! Though, I'm very impressed with how they were able to make it work!
I don't know if you've done that already, but I'd love to see you analyze the intro of The Art Of Dying
The ending 11/16 bar is: another bar of 5/16, then 6/16. Or perhaps 2 bars of 5/16, then 1/16. Point is, even that bar should probably be subdivided a tad more.
Arthur Hnatek, so good
Woo new video, hi!
Tigran is crazy. You are crazy. And I love it.
suggestion: video on 29/8 time signature
OH MY GOD YOU DID TIGRAN YES
The expectations to entertain this guy are just unmetable...
It rocks. Totally viable. Sounds like a scene of tension in a South American movie.
Or a Greek one, if you know your late Costa-Gravas!
7:22 I love how this dissection of this time signature included a discussion of common denominators and least common multiples. #math
The drums in 4/4 reminds me of a few Led Zeppelin songs where the song is in some odd time signature, but John Bonham couldn’t do the long division in his head, so he’s in 4/4 (Kashmir is an example, and several live versions of songs John switches the time signature to 4/4 because it’s too complex to play live.)
I saw the thumbnail and my jaw fell to the floor
There's a song by French artist Kurokotei called \frac{\textup{sig}=\frac{821}{149}}{bpm\approx533} which is in 821/149 time signature
That sounds….kinda silly.
Next video need you to break down pretty much every Messhugah song lol.
Next 512/16 can't wait
I still think they should’ve kept the naming scheme and went with Pianoeo
If I went to a tryout and they handed me sheet music in 256/16 time I would put on my hat and politely excuse myself.
something liked that happened to me when I started counting Generation by Liturgy lol. sounds complicated by it's really just best to conceptualize it as a 4/4 drum with a guitar riff that has an extra bit and moves around
Idea for a future video: What if 'Love Me Do' was in 256/16 time?
This is some straight up meshuggah stuff and I love it
I think this style feels strange to us because of limitations in the western musical notation system. This is music based on repeating patterns and polyrhythms, not barlines. In music notation we WANT to put everything in a barline. You can _technically_ do it, but it ends up not working in a practical sense.
I recommend Yogev Gabay's and Metal Music Theory's videos covering music by the metal band Meshuggah. This is the backbone of most of their music and it's also the core of many non-western styles.
Those channels cover a lot about alternate ways of notating these rhythm styles, ways that make so much sense and make them easier to feel and internalize.
It's fascinating!
Thing sound like djent, like the ones metal dudes were listening a few years back, but on piano.
If you want to hear a simpler version of polymeter...
Try Led Zep's Kashmir.
It merges 4/4 and 3/4 in 3 bars of 4/4 on drums and 4 bars of 3/4 on guitar...
That "In my life" Pianote section sounded just like the castle music from Dragon Warrior/Dragon Quest 1
What a drummer! Makes John Bonham look like Dave Clark.
Check out Don Ellis Bulgarian Bulge. It's in 33/16 but also has a smaller breakdown
And to think, I like Theme from a Summer Place.
Me walking to a jazz rehearsal with new people: I hope we play nice and easy standards
The band leader: so this next one is in 256/16…
...and it follows the Giant Steps chord changes. Ready?
So it's in 4/4. But they just needed a circuitous and convoluted way to say it.
You can tell he's a big fan of Meshuggah
bizarre time signatures are a joy lol
During the first half of the video I was saying to myself, "This is only looking at the piano score. It would be interesting to look at the drums." And the second half of the video started.
Can you do a video about the music of Dot Wigan from The Shaggs?
She is one of the greats when it comes to polyrhythmic time signatures.
This sounds like menu music from a 2000's game