Nigerian percussion master
Babatunde Olatunji arrived on the American music scene in 1959 with his album
Drums of Passion, which was a collection of traditional
Nigerian music for percussion and chanting. The album stayed on the charts for two years and had a profound impact on jazz and American popular music. Trained in the
Yoruba sakara style of drumming, Olatunji would have a major impact on Western popular music. He went on to teach, collaborate and record with numerous jazz and rock artists, including
Airto Moreira,
Carlos Santana and
Mickey Hart of the
Grateful Dead. Olatunji reached his greatest popularity during the height of the
Black Arts Movement of the 1960s and 1970s.
Afro-Cuban music makes extensive use of polyrhythms.
Cuban Rumba uses 3-based and 2-based rhythms at the same time. For example, the lead drummer (playing the
quinto) might play in , while the rest of the ensemble keeps playing .
Afro-Cuban conguero, or
conga player,
Mongo Santamaría was another percussionist whose polyrhythmic virtuosity helped transform both jazz and popular music. Santamaria fused Afro-Latin rhythms with
R&B and jazz as a bandleader in the 1950s, and was featured in the 1994 album
Buena Vista Social Club, which was the inspiration for
the like-titled documentary released five years later. Another form of polyrhythmic music is south Indian classical
Carnatic music. A kind of rhythmic
solfege called
konnakol is used as a tool to construct highly complex polyrhythms and to divide each beat of a pulse into various subdivisions, with the emphasised beat shifting from beat cycle to beat cycle. Common polyrhythms found in jazz are 3:2, which manifests as the quarter-note triplet; 2:3, usually in the form of dotted-quarter notes against quarter notes; 4:3, played as dotted-eighth notes against quarter notes (this one demands some technical proficiency to perform accurately, and was not at all common in jazz before
Tony Williams used it when playing with
Miles Davis); and finally time against , which along with 2:3 was used famously by
Elvin Jones and
McCoy Tyner playing with
John Coltrane.
Frank Zappa, especially towards the end of his career, experimented with complex polyrhythms, such as 11:17, and even nested polyrhythms (see "
The Black Page" for an example). The highly avant garde album produced by Frank Zappa,
Trout Mask Replica by Captain Beefheart and his Magic Band found extensive use of polyrhythm and cross-rhythm. The
metal bands
Mudvayne,
Nothingface,
Threat Signal,
Lamb of God, also use polyrhythms in their music. Contemporary
progressive metal bands such as
Meshuggah,
Gojira,
Periphery,
Textures,
TesseracT,
Tool,
Animals as Leaders,
Between the Buried and Me and
Dream Theater also incorporate polyrhythms in their music, and polyrhythms have also been increasingly heard in technical metal bands such as
Ion Dissonance,
The Dillinger Escape Plan,
Necrophagist,
Candiria,
The Contortionist and
Textures. Much
minimalist and
totalist music makes extensive use of polyrhythms.
Henry Cowell and
Conlon Nancarrow created music with yet more complex polytempo and using irrational numbers like pi|:
e.
Peter Magadini's album
Polyrhythm, with musicians
Peter Magadini,
George Duke, David Young, and
Don Menza, features different polyrhythmic themes on each of the six songs. • Doin' Time and a Half: Has the polyrhythmic theme of 6 over 4. • Five For Barbara: Mostly in with a recurring section in featuring 5 over 4. • The Modulator: The beginning tempo modulates to two times faster and then modulates back to two times slower. • Seventy Fourth Ave: In , with different instruments playing a 4 over the 7 occasionally. • Samba de Rollins: Includes a drum solo based on 3 over 4. • Midnight Bolero: In , has a continuous interlude of 2 over 3 and then 4 over 3.
King Crimson used polyrhythms extensively in their 1981 album
Discipline. Above all
Bill Bruford used polyrhythmic drumming throughout his career. The band
Queen used polyrhythm in their 1974 song "
The March of the Black Queen" with and time signatures.
Talking Heads'
Remain in Light used dense polyrhythms throughout the album, most notably on the song "The Great Curve".
Megadeth frequently tends to use polyrhythm in its drumming, notably from songs such as "Sleepwalker" or the ending of "
My Last Words", which are both played in 2:3.
Carbon Based Lifeforms have a song named "
Polyrytmi",
Finnish for "polyrhythm", on their album
Interloper. This song indeed does use polyrhythms in its melody.
Aphex Twin makes extensive use of polyrhythms in his electronic compositions. Japanese girl group
Perfume made use of the technique in their single, appropriately titled "
Polyrhythm", included on their second album
Game. The bridge of the song incorporates , in the vocals, common time () and in the drums. The
Britney Spears single "
Till the World Ends" (released March 2011) uses a 4:3 cross-rhythm in its hook. The outro of the song "
Animals" from the album
The 2nd Law by the band
Muse uses and time signatures for the guitar and drums respectively. The
Aaliyah song "Quit Hatin" uses against in the chorus. The
Japanese idol group
3776 makes use of polyrhythm in a number of their songs, most notably on their 2014 mini-album "
Love Letter", which features five songs that all include several rhythmic references to the number 3776. A secret track on the album has the group's leader, Ide Chiyono, explain some of the uses of polyrhythm to the listener.
The National song "
Fake Empire" uses a 4 over 3 polyrhythm.
The Cars' song "
Touch and Go" has a rhythm in the drum and bass and a rhythm in the keys and vocals. Harpist and pop folk musician
Joanna Newsom is known for the use of polyrhythms on her albums
The Milk-Eyed Mender and
Ys.
King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard used polyrhythms extensively throughout their discography, most notably on the album
Polygondwanaland. In
Vietnam,
bolero songs are composed with against . The
Britney Spears song "
...Baby One More Time" contains a 16:9 polyrhythm in the beginning of the music video (the boot tapping 16 times every 9 times the clock ticks - a full cycle can be heard from 0:05 to 0:14). The Sky Signals song "Amaterasu" is constructed around a 5:4 polyrhythm. == Examples ==