Sight-Read Any Rhythm Instantly (Music Instruction)
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Mark Phillips
Mark Phillips is the author of My Father's Cabin, and his work has appeared in the New York Times Magazine, Salon, Saturday Review, and Country Life. He has also worked as a beekeeper and occasional maple syrup producer in upstate New York.
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Sight-Read Any Rhythm Instantly (Music Instruction) - Mark Phillips
etc.
CHAPTER 1:
PLAYING (OR NOT PLAYING) ON THE BEAT
Discussion: Counting Notes vs. Counting Beats
Before you tap any examples, let’s talk about the difference between thinking in terms of notes and thinking in terms of beats. We’ll take the 3/4 measure below as an example. (Note: If you don’t understand what 3/4 or measure means, check out Appendix A: Glossary
right now).
Here’s how to think in terms of notes (the wrong way to think): You see that the measure above begins with a half note (which you know lasts for two beats), so you play it and count to two (one-two
). Then, you see a quarter note (which you know lasts for one beat), so you play it and count to one (one.
) So altogether, you’ve counted one-two, one.
Now let’s see how to think in terms of beats (the right way to think): You use your knowledge of how long the notes last only to identify where each of the beats begins and ends. Now, here’s the important part: For each beat in this measure you should determine only one thing—whether or not you hit a note. As you play the measure in question, in the back of your mind (half-consciously) you should say one-two-three
(representing the three beats of the measure). But in the front of your mind you should say (consciously) hit, don’t hit, hit.
This concept is so important that I’ll say it again. As you come to each beat of the measure, simply decide whether or not you hit a note. That’s really the whole trick. Now let’s take the measure above beat by beat to see this in action:
Beat 1: You hit a note (because a note is indicated there).
Beat 2: You don’t hit a note (because the half note you hit on beat 1 is still ringing).
Beat 3: You hit a note (because one is indicated there).
To summarize: Don’t count one-two, one.
Instead, play (beat by beat): hit, don’t hit, hit
(or, to say it another way, tap, nothing, tap
).
Exercises:
A. Counting Beats in 2/4 Time
You’ll notice that each beat in Exs. A-1 and A-2 (which are in 2/4 time) has been numbered. If it helps you to do so, place an X
at each beat in which there’ll be an attack (hit, tap). This way you can see at a glance which beats you’ll hit and which you won’t (the first few measures of Ex. A-1 have been started for you). If necessary, you can employ this visual aid on all of the examples in this chapter.
Now you’re ready to begin tapping! Remember: In 2/4 time, the quarter note ) receives one beat and the half note ) two beats. Tap in a moderate tempo.
B. Counting Beats in 3/4 Time
In 3/4 time (and in other time signatures whose bottom number is 4
), the dotted half note ) receives three beats. Remember: Don’t count notes, count beats (and for each, decide whether you hit
ordon’t hit
).
C. Counting Beats in 4/4 Time
In 4/4 time, the whole note ) receives four beats. Remember to count beats; for example, in measure 4 of Ex. C-1, don’t count the whole note as one-two-three-four.
Instead, count those numbers half-consciously while you consciously think hit, don’t hit, don’t hit, don’t hit
(or tap, nothing, nothing, nothing
).
4/4 time may also be indicated by the symbol c, which stands for common time.
Discussion: Meter and Accentuation
Before going on to Exercise D, let’s talk a little more about meter (the pattern of strong and weak beats dictated by the time signature). When you listen to music, you often feel beats in groups of two, three, or four. But how can you identify those particular groupings when you’re listening to, say, a steady stream of quarter notes? Where does one grouping end and the next begin?
The performer can (and should) make you aware of these groupings of beats by the way he