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19.4: Common Patterns in Compound Meter

  • Page ID
    258597
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    Compound Meter Patterns

    If compound meter is still a challenge, you may want to review 7.3: Compound Meter Beat Divisions. The natural stress in compound meter is on the first eighth note of the group of three. As with what we reviewed with simple meter, the first beat of the pattern is going to be the strongest. Patterns in compound meter can be quite varied. These examples are not exhaustive.

    In order to feel, count, and perform syncopation, it is important to keep track of where the beat should be. These audio examples include one measure of six eighth notes to give you the pulse before you will hear the measure that includes syncopation.

    Second Eighth Accented

    After a measure of all eighth notes, eighth rest, two eighths, a tie to the second group and the same pattern

    In this example of syncopation (opens in a new window), the first eighth on the first beat has been replaced with an eighth rest. The first sound we hear is on a weak subdivision of the beat. The second half of this pattern will sound similar since we have a tie from the end of the first group into the beginning of the second group.

    QR code for the link above

    Dotted Eighth Notes

    The dotted eighth note is equal to three sixteenth notes and can be used in a number of places within a compound meter pattern.

    One measure of eighth notes and then dotted eighth, three sixteenths, dotted eighth, three sixteenths

    In this example of syncopation (opens in a new window), the dotted eighth note followed by the sixteenth note lengthens the first part of the beat and adds emphasis to a weak portion of the beat subdivision. It also shifts where we expect to hear a sound.

    QR code for the link above


    This page titled 19.4: Common Patterns in Compound Meter is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Lauren C. Sharkey.

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