In western music, Beckerman says, 5/4 time is less than a tradition, more than a gimmick. These days it has even become fashionable to make a statement in 5 by adding a beat to something written in 4: Richard Rodgers' song "I Didn't Know What Time It Was" was reinterpreted by jazz pianist Brad Mehldau into a sort of lopsided jazz waltz - in 5/4 time. Gustav Holst's piece, "Mars, Bringer of War," from The Planets is another well known example. "They had a tune called 'Light Flight' and it made them stand out in some ways from other groups because of taking that kind of metrical chance."īut 5/4 is still an oddball thing that musicians and listeners love to collect and admire. "I remember when I was a kid there was a group called The Pentangle," Beckerman says. Beckerman says that some did follow suit. Still, there's no question that it heightened the awareness of it, in a lovely and playful way. You would think that might have opened the floodgates for the use of 5. So that if you have one hand playing 2 and the other 3, that gives it a different swinging lilt, and therefore we end up with this pattern." What we have in Brubeck is a complicated rhythm, and it's a rhythm that arises when you put 2 against 3. With "Take Five," Isachoff explains "we have 3 and 2, but it has a hotness to it. When a restless Frederic Chopin began experimenting and improvising, he produced a classically Chopin-sounding sonata movement that can be counted in five.īut if there was a moment when the 5/4 time signature exploded into the public consciousness, it was certainly the Brubeck moment: Dave Brubeck's excursion into 5 made his name and his fortune, in the jazz hit "Take Five." Isachoff says the piece, titled "Castles Half and Half," is part fox trot, which is in 4, and part waltz, in 3. James Reese Europe, a Harlem musician working in the early 20th century, used it in a piece he wrote for a famous dance team of the era, Vernon and Irene Castle. Like other forms, time signatures and musical devices, 5/4 time works as a means of personal expression Tchaikovsky made it sound like Tchaikovsky. But if you count it, you hear it: five, plain as day. Tchaikovsky wrote the second movement of his celebrated 6th symphony in 5 with a three–note figure, a triplet, which acts as a kind of diversionary tactic. "The famous so-called 'waltz' from the Pathetique symphony, which is, of course, anything but a waltz." "You know, we have Tchaikovsky's example," Beckerman says. Michael Beckerman, head of the music department at New York University, points to Tchaikovsky, who wanted to try something a little different when writing in the 1890s. "People tend to need some kind of an anchor to feel that there's some kind of organization happening rhythmically in the music." "There was a time, if we look back to medieval music, where you have endless streams of notes that form vague contours," Isacoff says.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |