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What is typical for a Mazurka besides the accent pattern? The Polonaise and Allemande, Mazurka and Courante, Waltz and Sarabande, Scherzo and Minuet Gavotte, and Polka and Gigue all have at least one similarity, those being: Polonaise and Allemande: Rhythmic complexity, Polonaise might start with an upbeat, a lot of sixteenth notes Mazurka and Courante: Fast, triple meter
Song structure in classical music vs EDM A popular form in the baroque period was the suite, which is a series of dance movements of various types: allemande, courant, gavotte, sarabande, minuet, gigue, and more
How do you decide what kind of rhythm time signature to use? Umm, how do you decide what size of shoes to buy? A size 40 foot will fit into a size 45 shoe, but it will probably not be comfortable while walking A time signature depends on the length of repeated patterns * 4 versus * 8 depends on the "least common denominator" of a pattern If most of your notes are 8ths, it makes a lot more sense to say that there are N 8ths within a measure as opposed
j s bach - Music: Practice Theory Stack Exchange I translate the paragraph of the German wikipedia article Suite here: Many dances appear in a super-imposed three-part scheme, where the middle part contrasts by one or more of the following: is written in a relative key contains a variation is differently instrumentated Examples for the resulting scheme are: Bourrée I – Bourrée II – Bourrée I Sarabande – Double (of the Sarabande
Do time signatures make sense? [duplicate] - Music: Practice Theory . . . If you think the denominators are arbitrary, try notating a stately sarabande in 3 8 time - you'll drown in beams and flags Next, try notating a lively tarantella in 3 1 time - you'll be overwhelmed by ties and similar-looking note heads and be unable to read anything The point of having different-length notes available rather than just clarifying everything with tempo indications is that
rhythm - Were there any automatic timekeeping devices prior to the . . . I don't think there was a way of numerically measuring the tempo, but I would guess the musicians had terms corresponding to "Sarabande Tempo" or "Tarantella Tempo" for their favorite dances Thousands of years ago, pendulums weren't used, but I might consider the dancers an "automatic timekeeping device," particularly if one yells out "Too slow!
What exactly is the point of time signatures and measures? Everywhere I look, every resource I read, says that time signatures determine the quot;feel quot; and meter of the music And then the person giving the explanation will show a piece of music as an