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Re: Re: OT The Sub Pulse was West African/African Diaspora rhythms:3/4, 4/4, 6/8, 12/8
>
>
> On 11:59 AM, Mark Showalter wrote:
> > Hello,
> >
> > Ok, let me see if I have this now.
> >
> > The pulse is 4/4 because of the drums on the beat, but the
> > "sub-pulse" is the bass& the palm muted guitar because they play
> > on the sub-division of the beat?
> >
> > When you count to the music (let's take good old 4/4)
> the numbers you count 1, 2, 3, 4
> are the PULSE (In this case, the 4 pulse)
Let's make sure we're clear here. 4/4 means:
4 beats to a measure & each beat is represented by a 1/4 note.
>
> The way you subdivide that pulse so that all of the notes in the
> ostinato rhythm (repetitive syncopative
> or non-syncopative rhythms) fall on the subdivisions (in the case
> of our example, the 8th notes)
> is what I call the SUB PULSE
Ok, so in the case of the song we're talking about, you're calling the
first sud-division of the beat the sub-pulse. Is this always the case? For
instance, what about the "sub-pulse" being an accented 1/16 note pattern &
no 1/8 note pattern? If I understand your next part, then this answer
should be yes.
> In a typical 3/4, 4/4, 5/4, 6/4, 7/4, etc. tune you might have a subpulse
> that is 8th notes, triplet 8th notes, 16th notes, triplet 16th
> notes or even 32nd notes (Mbalax from Senegal,
> or grooves from the hip hop producer Timbaland as the rare example)
> Any embellishment that occurs (as distinguished from what we call
> fills, or breaking from the pattern
> at the end of every 8, 16 or 32 bars, typically) at a faster rate
> (smaller note value)
> and in this particular case, 16th notes what I call
> EMBELLISHMENTS
> They are specifically played at a faster rate than the subpulse
So what would you call embellishments that aren't played faster than the
sub-pulse?
> In groove playing or groove arrangement, it's extremely important
> to understand what the
> SUB PULSE is. if you ignore it or use a note value that is either
> too high or too low, you run the risk
> of not understanding how the listener hears the music; how the
> dancer dances to it.
Not being a dancer I must admit this is getting a bit obscure for me. Am I
to assume that the concept of "sub-pulse" is raelly only important in
regards to dance music?
> Though 16th notes are played periodically as embellishments by the
> drum or the 'pick bass' guitar lines
> in this case) the 'feel' of the music is NOT 16th notes, but rather
> 8th notes (the note value of the syncopative
> bass line that drives this song.
Sorry, but as far as I could tell, there was no syncopation in the
bassline or the muted guitar part whatsoever, although I might have missed
it.
> People frequently mistake the PULSE for the SUBPULSE, the SUBPULSE
> for EMBELLISHMENTS.
> This is why so many guitar and keyboard players (sorry for picking
> on you guys) write such horrible
> drum machine patterns for their songs.
This would not be me since I've never really thought about the "sub-pulse"
issue other than when some of my drummer/perc guys tried to explain the
concept to me.....& hence this entire discussion.
you only need to add one 16/th note
> offbeat snare drum hit to the drum beat of Queen's 'We Will Rock
> You" to realize that the original and the embellished versions
> sound completely different to the the listener.
I would have to mildly dissagree here as I doubt that most people really
notice much differnce in an arragement, especially dance, since if you
play a song in 4/4 the majority of people are dancing to that only & don't
notice any additions or such. Now, if you are referring to professional
dancers then I would certainly agree that they would pick up on any
changes & could then incorporate those changes into their performance. The
common everyday folk however........
I would like to add that I have been a performer for over 30 years,
although the majority of my music is not dance oriented. I do have some in
my bag, like early Beatles, Clapton's "wonderful Tonite" & such, but my
work ( both arranging & performing ) on dance material is rather limited.
> Lastly, it should be said that this is a very effective map for
> arrangement, composition and even real time
> improvisation.
>
> As Alfred Korzybski said, "The Map is not the Territory".
Picasso: "The picture is not the thing."
> Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle states that by merely observing,
> on a sub atomic level, that
> we change the nature of the thing we observe (okay, this is a very
> simplistic understanding of his
> principle but a useful one).
Not sure how this applies to any of this discussion....... and that is not
actually what the Uncertainty Principle states: When cannot know the
values of complimentary aspects of a particle beyond the limits of the
principle or the Heisenberg limit. So, you can get a good idea of the
speed of a particle or it's position, but not both & the more you know of
one value the less you can know of the other. So, I'm lost as to why you
brought this up.........
> My mentor, the amazing maverick scientist Gregory Bateson said,
> "We are doomed to make
> imperfect maps of reality due to our inherent neurophysiology. He
> said that, however, there
> is such a thing as a better map.
>
> So, this is a small part of the best map I can offer and I try to
> constantly find holes in it and accept any critiques of it. (lol,
> after thirty years of teaching it, a student last week informed me
> that there isn't a word tertiary but that the two correct terms are
> binary and ternary................you learn something every day,
> hopefully.
Your student was wrong:
•The Tertiary is a term for a geologic period 65 million to 2.588
million years ago. The Tertiary covered the time span between the
superseded Secondary period and the Quaternary
Mark Showalter
Minden Jot!
myspace.com/folkstone57
http://www.last.fm/music/Mark+Showalter
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