Sub-Saharan African rhythm A divisive form of
cross-rhythm is the basis for most
Sub-Saharan African music traditions. Rhythmic patterns are generated by simultaneously dividing a span of musical time by a triple-beat scheme and a duple-beat scheme. In the development of cross rhythm, there are some selected rhythmic materials or beat schemes that are customarily used. These beat schemes, in their generic forms, are simple divisions of the same musical period in equal units, producing varying rhythmic densities or motions. At the center of a core of rhythmic traditions within which the composer conveys his ideas is the technique of cross-rhythm. The technique of cross-rhythm is a simultaneous use of contrasting rhythmic patterns within the same scheme of accents or meter... By the very nature of the desired resultant rhythm, the main beat scheme cannot be separated from the secondary beat scheme. It is the interplay of the two elements that produces the cross-rhythmic texture. "the entire African rhythmic structure... is divisive in nature".
Classical music Additive rhythms are used, for example, by
Béla Bartók, who was influenced by similar rhythms in
Bulgarian folk music. The third movement of Bartók's
String Quartet No. 5, a scherzo marked
alla bulgarese features a " rhythm (4+2+3)".
Stravinsky's
Octet for Wind Instruments "ends with a jazzy 3+3+2 = 8 swung coda". Stravinsky himself found a kinship with additive rhythms in music of the
Renaissance and
Baroque periods. For example, he marvelled at the
Laudate Pueri from
Monteverdi's
Vespers of 1610, where the music follows the natural accentuation of the Latin words to create metrical groupings of twos, threes and fours at the very start: "I know of no music before or since…. which so felicitously exploits accentual and metrical variation and irregularity, and no more subtle rhythmic construction of any kind than that which is set in motion at the beginning of the 'Laudate Pueri,’ if, that is, the music is sung according to the verbal accents instead of... the editor's bar-lines".
Olivier Messiaen made extensive use of additive rhythmic patterns, much of it stemming from his close study of the rhythms of Indian music. His "Danse de la fureur, pour les sept trompettes" from
The Quartet for the End of Time is a bracing example. A gentler exploration of additive patterns can be found in "Le Regard de la Vierge" from the same composer's piano cycle ''
Vingt regards sur l'enfant-Jésus''. Additive patterns also occur in some music of
Philip Glass, and other
minimalists, most noticeably the "one-two-one-two-three" chorus parts in
Einstein on the Beach. They may also occur in passing in pieces which are on the whole in conventional meters.
György Ligeti's
Étude No. 13, "L'escalier du diable" features patterns involving quavers grouped in twos and threes. The rhythm at the start of the study follows the pattern , then . According to the composer's note, the time signature "serves only as a guideline, the actual meter consists of 36 quavers (three 'bars'), divided asymmetrically".
Other music In
jazz,
Dave Brubeck's "
Blue Rondo à la Turk" features bars of nine quavers grouped into patterns of at the start.
George Harrison's song "
Here Comes the Sun" on
The Beatles'
Abbey Road features a rhythm "which switches between , and on the bridge". "The special effect of running even eighth notes accented as if triplets against the grain of the underlying backbeat is carried to a point more reminiscent of Stravinsky than of the Beatles". ==Tresillo: divisive and additive interpretations==