Simple versus compound Simple meters are those whose upper number is 2, 3, or 4, sometimes described as
duple meter,
triple meter, and
quadruple meter respectively. In
compound meter, the note values specified by the bottom number are grouped into threes, and the upper number is a multiple of 3, such as 6, 9, or 12. The lower number is most commonly an 8 (an eighth-note or quaver): as in or . Other upper numbers correspond to
irregular meters.
Beat and subdivision Musical passages commonly feature a recurring pulse, or
beat, usually in the range of 60–140 beats per minute. Depending on the tempo of the music, this beat may correspond to the note value specified by the time signature, or to a grouping of such note values. Most commonly, in simple time signatures, the beat is the same as the note value of the signature, but in compound signatures, the beat is usually a
dotted note value corresponding to three of the signature's note values. Either way, the next lower note value shorter than the beat is called the
subdivision. On occasion a bar may seem like one singular beat. For example, a fast waltz, notated in time, may be described as being
one in a bar. Conversely, at slow tempos, the beat might even be a smaller note value than the one enumerated by the time signature. Mathematically the time signatures of, e.g., and are interchangeable. In a sense
all simple triple time signatures, such as , , , etc.—and all compound duple times, such as , and so on, are equivalent. A piece in can be easily rewritten in , simply by halving the length of the notes. : \new Staff > Other time signature rewritings are possible: most commonly a simple time-signature with triplets translates into a compound meter. : \new Staff > The choice of time signature in these cases is largely a matter of tradition. Particular time signatures are traditionally associated with different music styles—it would seem strange to notate a conventional
rock song in or , rather than .
Examples In the examples below,
bold denotes the primary stress of the measure, and
italics denote a secondary stress. Syllables such as "and" are frequently used for pulsing in between numbers.
Simple: is a simple
triple meter time signature that represents three quarter notes (crotchets), usually perceived as three beats. In this case the subdivision would be the eighth note (quaver). It is felt as :::
one and
two and
three and ...
Compound: Most often, is felt as two beats, each being a dotted quarter note (crotchet), and each containing subdivisions of three eighth notes (quavers). It is felt as :::
one two three
four five six ... The table below shows the characteristics of the most frequently used time signatures.
Tempo giusto While changing the bottom number and keeping the top number fixed only formally changes notation, without changing meaning – , , , and are all three beats to a meter, just noted with eighth notes, quarter notes, half notes, or whole notes – these conventionally imply different performance and different tempi. Conventionally, larger numbers in the bottom correspond to faster tempi and smaller numbers correspond to slower tempi. This convention is known as
tempo giusto, and means that the tempo of each note remains in a narrower, "normal" range. For illustration, a quarter note might correspond to 60–120 bpm (quintuplet 75–150, triplet 90–180 and septuplet 105–210), a half note to 30–60 bpm (triplet 45–90), a whole note to 15–30 bpm, and an eighth note to 120–240 bpm; these are not strict, but show an example of "normal" ranges. This convention dates to the
Baroque era, when tempo changes were indicated by changing time signature during the piece, rather than by using a single time signature and changing tempo marking. == Complex time signatures == Signatures that do not fit the usual simple or compound categories are called
complex,
asymmetric,
irregular,
unusual, or
odd—though these are broad terms, and usually a more specific description is any meter which combines both simple and compound beats. Irregular meters are common in some non-Western music, and in ancient Greek music such as the
Delphic Hymns to Apollo, but the corresponding time signatures rarely appeared in formal written Western music until the 19th century. Early anomalous examples appeared in Spain between 1516 and 1520, plus a small section in Handel's opera
Orlando (1733). The third movement of
Frédéric Chopin's
Piano Sonata No. 1 (1828) is an early, but by no means the earliest, example of time in solo piano music.
Anton Reicha's Fugue No. 20 from his
Thirty-six Fugues, published in 1803, is also for piano and is in . The
waltz-like second movement of Tchaikovsky's
Pathétique Symphony (shown below), often described as a "limping waltz", is a notable example of time in orchestral music. : \relative c { \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo 4 = 144 \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"cello" \clef bass \key d \major \time 5/4 fis4\mf(^\markup { \bold { Allegro con grazia } } g) \tuplet 3/2 { a8(\ a4(\mf b) \tuplet 3/2 { cis8(\ [a( g) fis-. ] e-. [ es-.( d-. cis-. b-. bes-.) ] a4\mf } Examples from
20th-century classical music include: •
Gustav Holst's "Mars, the Bringer of War" and "Neptune, the Mystic" from
The Planets (both in ) •
Paul Hindemith's "Fuga secunda" in G from
Ludus Tonalis () • the ending of
Stravinsky's The Firebird () • the fugue from
Heitor Villa-Lobos's
Bachianas Brasileiras No. 9 () • the themes for the
Mission: Impossible television series by
Lalo Schifrin (in ) and for
Room 222 by
Jerry Goldsmith (in ) In the Western popular music tradition, unusual time signatures occur as well, with
progressive rock in particular making frequent use of them. The use of shifting meters in
The Beatles' "
Strawberry Fields Forever" and the use of
quintuple meter in their "
Within You, Without You" are well-known examples, as is
Radiohead's "
Paranoid Android" (includes ).
Paul Desmond's
jazz composition "
Take Five", in time, was one of a number of irregular-meter compositions that
The Dave Brubeck Quartet played. They played other compositions in ("Eleven Four"), ("
Unsquare Dance"), and ("
Blue Rondo à la Turk"), expressed as . "Blue Rondo à la Turk" is an example of a signature that, despite appearing merely compound triple, is actually more complex. Brubeck's title refers to the characteristic
aksak meter of the Turkish
karşılama dance. However, such time signatures are only unusual in most Western music. Traditional
music of the Balkans uses such meters extensively.
Bulgarian dances, for example, include forms with 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 22, 25 and other numbers of beats per measure. These rhythms are notated as
additive rhythms based on simple units, usually 2, 3 and 4 beats, though the notation fails to describe the
metric "time bending" taking place, or
compound meters. See
Additive meters below.
Some video samples are shown below. ==Mixed meters==