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19.2: Natural Stress in Meter

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    258594
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    Review of Previously Covered Concepts

    Duple Meter

    In a simple duple meter, the natural stress or accent is a strong beat on beat one and a weaker beat on beat two. When anything other than the downbeat is accented, we will start to feel a shift that leads to syncopation.

    Triple Meter

    In a simple triple meter, the natural stress or accent is a strong beat on beat one and weak beats on beats two and three. If the accent is shifted to the second or third beat, the pattern will feel syncopated.

    Quadruple Meter

    In a simple quadruple meter, the natural stress or accent is a strong beat on beat one and a secondary strong beat on beat three (although beat three is not as strong as beat one). If the accent is shifted to the second or fourth beats, the pattern will feel syncopated.

    Dotted Quarters and Ties

    When a dotted quarter note is used in simple meter, the long-short pattern of a dotted quarter and eighth gives a syncopated feel. This can also be achieved through the use of ties to extend the length of a note and shift our natural pattern of stresses.

    Rests

    Rests can often be used to create syncopation when the rest falls on a beat that would normally be a strong beat.

    Moving Forward

    Arrows indicating strong first and third sixteenths and weaker second and fourth sixteenthsThese concepts and ideas are still applicable to the rhythms in this chapter, but we will start looking at syncopation with smaller note values within these same meters. Within a beat subdivision - eighth notes and sixteenth notes - we can also find more complex syncopation.

    When there is a group of sixteenth notes that make up a beat in simple meter, the first of the group receives a natural accent. The third of the group is the next strongest, and the second and fourth are the weakest. Syncopation can be created by giving extra stress to these weaker parts of the beat.


    This page titled 19.2: Natural Stress in Meter is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Lauren C. Sharkey.