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Most Common Melodic Rhythms


Gongchime

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Have a look at figure 9 in this article:

Tone and Voice: A Derivation of the Rules of Voice-leading from Perceptual Principles

Since most melodic material clusters around the eighth note, and since every melody I analyzed both western popular and oriental folk music contain eighth notes within 2 measuresor so, we can eliminate all rhythms which do not contain eighth notes as being much more rare. With that in mind, I created a rhythm chart of the likely rhythms one would encounter in a popular melody.

Some rhythm schemes analyzed have only 3 rhythmic positions occupied, most have four as I've created on the chart but may not start on the downbeat. Many popular melodic rhythms do not contain a "c" cell. A tie can be placed anywhere, effectively expanding this chart exponentially. There are more a' (read a prime) and b' in popular music than in folk music where primes are fairly nonexistant. The primes represent just a slight rhythmic variation, either with the addition of a sixteenth note somewhere or a part of the rhythm subtracted. Sometimes this is created with a tie to a repeating rhythmic cell from the previous, perhaps creating a^a' b b or a b^a' b.

Green means they are the most common rhythms. They are the most common because they contain two or more pairs of eighth notes. Yellow means be careful because they only have one set of eighth notes or too many sixteenth notes. Red means there is only one set of eighth notes AND too many sixteenth notes. Blue means syncopated. Brown means ignore my scribbles.

Eighth note triples and quarter note triplets occur much more frequently, for example, in Bob Marley's music but are not covered here. Another kind of syncopated rhythm that also occurs in popular music is the eighth note followed by a quarter note, folowed by another eighth note but is not covered here because it is rare enough not to warrant it.

Lastly an eighth note rest followed by an eighth note is a fairly common starting rhythm especially for verses and also for classical music but is also not included because it is not likely to repeat except at the beginning of another phrase or subphrase.

These rhythms can be found under my pics at MySpace.com - Greg - Las Vegas /Bali, Indonesia - Ambient / Electronica / Experimental - www.myspace.com/gongchime on the second page of the Music Composition folder or on Photobucket at

MostCommonRhythmscopy.jpg

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Only probabilites. Next is to take the most common melodic solutions and the most common rhythmic solutions to arrive at merely competent music. As they say in Expert Systems circles, always competent beats ocassionally brilliant probably also for the average working composer.

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Guest QcCowboy

So, in other words, this is all completly pointless, right?

Compiling a list of most common motivic outlines and rhythmic fragments as a means of... what? Writing banal ordinary tunes?

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I think in popular/folk music, rhythms are generally iambic, because that's how we speak. Either in a DAdaDAdaDA fashion or DAdadaDAdadaDA fashion. Not to say there aren't variations, of course there are. But look at that last sentence: of COURSE there ARE. Perfectly masculine iambic. That's how speech patterns go, so I think a lot of popular music follows suit.

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You guys have it all wrong. All you have to do is get really, really, really, really, really, really, really, high. Then go back and re-read the original post and look at the drawings. Once the words start moving around and the circular charts start spinning, then you will finally understand it.

This is the most important step...

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Guest QcCowboy

But speach patterns are heavily dependant on the actual rhythm of the particular language.

for example, the tonic accent of the word "animal" in English is

A-nimal

while in french it is

ani-MAL

it's basically the same word, the same meaning, the same number of syllables, but the mirror one of the other.

Tonic accents decide the particular rhythmic flavour of a language.

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Nah, just playing around with stuff. And helping future composers who find this thread, start within the ballpark of expectations. Forgot to mention that ending rhythms are usually lengthened. There was something else too but I'll have to remember what it was. Hmmm....

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I would even argue that there is some stress on the first syllable in French. Not the same way we stress it in English, but some stress, making it, again, iambic.

An iamb is rising (da-DUM), though, so stress on the first syllable would make it "trochaic" or "dactylic"... although I definitely wouldn't use those words to describe the prosody of a language in general terms. It's way more complex (and interesting) than that, people. :(

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Guest QcCowboy
I would even argue that there is some stress on the first syllable in French. Not the same way we stress it in English, but some stress, making it, again, iambic.

You would also be wrong to refer to the French word "Animal" as an iambic rhythm. It is, in fact, an anapest. three syllables, only the third of which is stresed

In English, the same word is a dactyl. three syllables, only the first of which is stresed Not an Iambe. two syllables, only the second of which is stresed

And the two initial syllables are quite unaccented in French. So you could argue until you turned bleu all you wanted, but that still wouldn't make it vrai.

So, continuing from the same word, setting the French word "animal" to music, you would be wrong to start it on a strong beat.

Unfortunately, too much pop music ignores tonic accents and displaces the natural rhythm of words to force-fit them into the music.

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Guest DOFTS

Gong, if you want to help future composers. Write something that matters. All of your threads have been complete BULLLLLLLLLLSHIT.

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DOFTS, if you think the theories behind my music are so bad, I'd like to hear your music because if your music is better than mine, which in my opinion is quite excellent, your music must be positively spectacular.

Also in my theory, a tie between two sixteenth length rhythmic events would bring a rhythmic cell closer to optimal since two sixteenths added together equal an eighth which is what the evidence in the link posted suggests is the optimal which most melodic rhythms cluster around.

The same way that a student of language would need to study the basic vocabulary to speak the language well (even though he may know a few more complex sentences already) a student of music would perhaps do well to limit their melodic and rhythmic vocabulary at least much of the time, until they have their skills down.

If they can't regularly put a folklike melody together, then the fact that one time they accidentally hit a nail with their head while jumping around doesn't really mean they know how to build a house.

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Guest QcCowboy

Gongster (may I call you that?): why don't YOU post some music you've written.

THAT way we can all judge whether your theories on music are as advanced as your artistic skills.

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Guest QcCowboy

OK, Greg (aka Gongster), you write gamelan music.

Why don't you give us some concrete examples of how your "theories" apply to music OTHER than pop or gamelan music. I would be interested in some concrete examples.

So far, every time you've been confronted with demands for examples, you've come up with some completely off-the-wall remark about tieing two 16th notes.

So far, your entire thesis has been related to placing bricks one next to the other. I'm sorry, but knowing how to do that will NOT help you to build a house.

Let's hear exactly HOW this theory of yours applies to real-life music.

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The study of melodic rhythm is probalby THE most important element one could focus on, even if my theories about it are wrong. Carefully constructed bricks such as these are indeed the way to compose minimally folklike music.

The only things about it that were not mentioned is that they do not have to start on the downbeat and where you start will affect where you stop. I normally compose instrumental music but the terminology of popular music is relevant here. The "Chorus" should end on a rhythmically important position.

That's different for a 4 measure phrase than a 2 measure phrase. So, if I started my rhythmic example on the down beat and wanted a two measure phrase, then we would have to truncate the rhythm at beat 3 of the second measure or another strong rhythmic position such as that.

Of course this is in relationship to the other section of music, the "verse". If the chorus ends on a somewhat weaker rhythmic position than on beat three, then it probably doesn't make much sense to end the verse an a similarly strong or even stronger position.

Any examples you get from me will all be related to popular styles such as rock, pop or hip hop. This is the only composition forum where everyone, including the moderators focus on requiring posts be in a different form and not on the current content.

The post about ties was not in response to you Cowboy.

Anyway, knowledge about melodic rhythm applies equally to both classical and pop only the melodic lines are longer in classical music.

Frankly, I don't care to give examples from the classical repertoire. Many young people will have had more exposure to popular music. It's important to build on a student's prior knowledge not force them to accept my prefered styles within the western canon.

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Guest QcCowboy

Greg, I'm trying to understand where you're coming from with these posts.

It's as if you're trying to give lessons here or something.

It's not that the effort isn't appreciated, but rather that it's not being done in quite the right way for this forum.

You post these monumental threads, with images that could have been drawn by a small child... that sort of destroys your credibility as any sort of instructor, regardless of your declared studies in music education.

Wha exactly do you hope to achieve with your posts here?

THAT would help us a great deal in understanding whether or not this forum is really for you or not.

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The "Chorus" should end on a rhythmically important position.

Of course this is in relationship to the other section of music, the "verse". If the chorus ends on a somewhat weaker rhythmic position than on beat three, then it probably doesn't make much sense to end the verse an a similarly strong or even stronger position.

Anyway, knowledge about melodic rhythm applies equally to both classical and pop only the melodic lines are longer in classical music.

We all know the terms and we all know the "rules." It's about how you use them, and we haven't seen you do that, yet. If I write a song and the ending of the chorus doesn't fit the "rule" as you've stated, then am I wrong? Is my chorus bad because of that? Maybe, maybe not. If I've found a way to end my chorus which sounds good and is appropriate to the song, but doesn't fit your "rule," then who's to say my chorus isn't valid?

Anyone who knows the terms can theorize until they turn blue, but we like to see specific examples. And when we talk about specific examples almost every rule has an exception. I like theorizing, but only if we have things to back up our theories. Otherwise it looks like you're just repeating things you heard someone say once.

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  • 3 weeks later...
Greg, I'm trying to understand where you're coming from with these posts.

It's as if you're trying to give lessons here or something.

It's not that the effort isn't appreciated, but rather that it's not being done in quite the right way for this forum.

You post these monumental threads, with images that could have been drawn by a small child... that sort of destroys your credibility as any sort of instructor, regardless of your declared studies in music education.

Wha exactly do you hope to achieve with your posts here?

THAT would help us a great deal in understanding whether or not this forum is really for you or not.

Although I agree Qc that cleansliness assists the learner. Knowledge is knowledge even if there is chocalate wiped all over it. I took this dirty lesson he just gave and found it to be of some amusement.

The Universal is long Dead.

All we have are things that work within a context so why not start somewhere. Instead of bashing somones credibility based on how pretty their research looks why not base it off their actual research.

By the way I did enjoy the talk about language and I agree with your point.

P.S.I don't intend for this to be a bitter rebuttal only a healthy doughboyeque poke at your remark.

:D

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