(Redirected from 4/4 time)
The 'time signature' (also known as "
meter signature") is a notational convention used in
Western musical notation to specify how many
beats are in each
bar and what
note value constitutes one beat. Time signatures indicate meter, but do not necessarily determine it.

Two staves with time signature highlighted in blue
Most time signatures comprise two numbers, one above the other. In text (as in this article), time signatures are written in the manner of a
fraction: the example shown at right would be written 3/4.
In a musical score, the time signature appears at the beginning of the piece, immediately following the
key signature (or immediately following the
clef if the piece is in
C major or
A minor). A mid-score time signature, usually immediately following a
barline, indicates a change of meter.
Simple and compound time signatures

Basic time signatures: 4/4 or common (C), 2/2 or cut-common (¢), 2/4, 3/4 & 6/8
Time signatures can be "simple" or "compound".
Simple time signatures
In
simple time signatures, each beat is divided into two equal parts. Typically, therefore, each beat has the value of a non-dotted note.
★ the 'upper' number indicates ''how many
beats there are in a
measure'';
★ the 'lower' number indicates ''the
note value which represents one beat (the "beat unit")''.
The most common simple time signatures are 2/4, 3/4, and 4/4. The 4 at the bottom indicates that the beat unit is the quarter note or
crotchet. For example, 3/4 means three quarter-note beats per measure.
Notational variations in simple time
The letter "C" ("common time")—deriving from the
broken circle used in early music—may be used in place of the 4/4 time signature. A "C" with a vertical line through it is used in place of 2/2, also known as "alla breve" or, colloquially, "cut time" or "cut common time". This "cut" symbol, doubled, is also occasionally used for 4/2, although, confusingly, some examples omit the doubling.
Compound time signatures
In
compound time signatures, each main beat is divided into three equal parts. Compound time signatures are distinguished by an 'upper' number which is commonly 6, 9 or 12. The most common 'lower' number in a compound time signature is 8, meaning the time is beaten in eighth notes (quavers).
Unlike simple time, however, compound time uses a
dotted note for the beat unit. Consequently, the upper and lower numbers in compound time signatures do ''not'' represent the number of beats per bar and the beat unit.
Interpreting compound time signatures
The upper and lower numbers in compound time signatures need to be treated as follows:
★ To determine the number of beats per bar, ''divide the 'upper' number by three''. For example, in 6/8, there are 2 beats per measure. The pulse in a compound 6/8 will have two dotted quarter-note (crotchet) beats, and each beat will subdivide into a group of three eighth notes.
★ To identify the "beat unit" (i.e. which type of note represents one beat), ''multiply the
note value ''represented'' by the ''lower'' number by three''. In 6/8, the lower number (8) represents the note value of an eighth note. Multiplying that note value by three gives a unit of a dotted quarter note, or 3 eighth notes.
For example, 12/8 time would be counted:
'One' two three 'four' five six 'seven' eight nine 'ten' eleven twelve.
In compound time, the beat unit is always a dotted
note value. The most common compound time signatures are 6/8, 9/8 and 12/8, denoting two, three and four ''dotted quarter note'' beats per bar.
Beat and time
Time signatures indicating two beats per bar (whether simple or compound) are called 'duple time'; those with three beats to the bar are 'triple time'. To the ear, a bar may seem like one singular beat. For example, in some fast waltzes, which are most commonly in 3/4 time, The term 'single time' may be used. Terms such as ''quadruple'' (4), ''quintuple'' (5), and so on are also occasionally used.
Most frequent time signatures
| 'Simple time signatures' |
| 4/4 | ''common time'': widely used in most forms of Western classical and popular music. |
| 2/2 | ''alla breve'', ''cut time'': used for marches and fast orchestral music. Frequently occurs in musical theater. Sometimes called "in 2". |
| 4/2 | common in early music; rarer since 1600, although Brahms and other composers used it occasionally. |
| 2/4 | used for polkas or marches |
| 3/4 | used for waltzes, minuets, scherzi, and country & western ballads. |
| 'Compound time signatures' | |
| 6/8 | double jigs, fast waltzes, marches and some rock music. |
| 9/8 | "compound triple time", used in triple ("slip") jigs, otherwise occurring rarely (The Sorcerer's Apprentice and The Ride of the Valkyries are some familiar examples) |
| 12/8 | classical music; also common in slower blues and doo-wop, also used more recently in rock music. |
Complex time signatures
Signatures which do not fit into the usual duple or triple categories are known as ''complex'', ''asymmetric'', or ''irregular'', although these are broad terms, and usually a more specific description is appropriate. Most often these can be recognised by the upper number being 5, 7, or another, larger,
prime number, but this is not necessarily so; for example, the addition of two triple beats and a duple beat in a bar gives an upper number of 8 (such as in
Coldplay's "Clocks"). The earliest examples of irregular signatures are found in instrumental music by
Giovanni Valentini (1582-1649) and
Anton Reicha (1770-1836), written in 5/4, 9/8, etc. Although these more complex meters were common in non-Western music, they were rarely used in formal written Western music until the late
19th century . The
waltz-like second movement of
Tchaikovsky's
Pathétique Symphony (premiered in
1893) is one of the more famous examples of 5/4. Examples from the 20th century include
Holst's "Mars, the Bringer of War," (5/4) from the orchestral suite
The Planets, and the ending of
Stravinsky's Firebird (7/4); examples from the Western popular music tradition include "
Money" (7/8), from the progressive rock band
Pink Floyd, popular grunge band
Soundgarden's "
Outshined" (7/4), American death metal band Nile's "Sacrifice Unto Sebek" (Alternating between 11/8 and 7/8), Canadian rock band
April Wine's "Say Hello" (6/4), and popular alternative rock band
Incubus' "Make Yourself" (7/4 followed by two bars of 4/4).
The
jazz composition "
Take Five", written in 5/4 time, was one of a number of irregular-meter experiments of The
Dave Brubeck Quartet, which also produced compositions in 11/4 ("Eleven Four"), 7/4 ("Unsquare Dance"), and 9/8 ("Blue Rondo a la Turk"), expressed as 2+2+2+3/8, this last being a good example of a work in a signature which, despite appearing merely compound triple, is actually more complex.
It should be pointed out that such time signatures are only considered "unusual" from a Western point of view. In contrast, for example,
Bulgarian dances use such meters extensively, including forms with 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 22, 25 and other numbers of beats per measure. These rhythms are notated as ''additive rhythms'' based on simple units, usually 1, 2, 3 and 4 beats, though the notation fails to describe the
metric 'time bending' taking place; or as
compound meters, for example the Bulgarian Sedi Donka 25 = 7+7+11, where 7 = 3+2+2 and 11 = 2+2+3+2+2 or 4+3+4, where the 3 may played as 2+1, though in other circumstances as 1+2 or with quadruplets. See
Variations below.
For more examples, see
List of works in unusual time signatures.
Mixed meters
While time signatures usually express a regular pattern of beat stresses continuing through a piece (or at least a section), sometimes composers place a different time signature at the beginning of each bar, resulting in music with an extremely irregular rhythmic feel. In this case the time signatures are an aid to the performers, not an indication of
meter. The ''Promenade'' from
Mussorgsky's ''
Pictures at an Exhibition'' is a good example:
:

Mussorgsky's ''Pictures at an Exhibition'' "Promenade"
Burt Bacharach's rhythmically exciting song "Promises, Promises" likewise features a constantly changing meter.
Igor Stravinsky's ''
The Rite of Spring'' is famous for its "savage" rhythms:
:

Stravinsky, ''The Rite of Spring'', "Sacrificial Dance"
Some composers (and even
Hymnals) simply omit the time signature in such cases. Many songs in
Bertolt Brecht's plays also follow this convention.
Some pieces have no time signature, as there is no discernible rhythm. This is commonly known as
free time. Sometimes one is provided (usually 4/4) so that the performer finds the piece easier to read, and simply has 'free time' written as a direction. Sometimes the word FREE is written downwards on the stave to indicate the piece is in free time.
Erik Satie wrote many compositions which are ostensibly in free time, but actually follow an unstated and unchanging simple time signature throughout. Later composers have made more effective use of this device, writing music which is almost devoid of any discernable regularity of pulse.
If two time signatures alternate repeatedly, sometimes the two signatures will be placed together at the beginning of the piece or section, as in this example, the chorus from the song "America" from
West Side Story: in this case, it alternates between 6/8 (in two) in the first measure of each pair and 3/4 (in three) in the second measure.
:

alternating_time_signatures2.gif
Variants
Additive meters
To indicate more complex patterns of stresses, such as
additive rhythms, more complex time signatures can be used. For example, the signature
:

additive_time_signature.png
which can be written ''3+2+3/8'', means that the first of a group of three eighth notes (quavers) is to be stressed, then the first of a group of two, then first of a group of three again. The stress pattern is usually counted as 'one'-two-three-'one'-two-'one'-two-three. This kind of time signature is commonly used to notate folk and non-Western types of music. In classical music,
Béla Bartók and
Olivier Messiaen have used such time signatures in their works.
Romanian
musicologist Constantin Brăiloiu had a special interest in compound time signatures, developed while studying the
traditional music of certain regions in his country. While investigating the origins of such unusual meters, he learned that they were even more characteristic of the traditional music of neighboring peoples (e.g. the
Bulgarians). He suggested that such timings can be regarded as compounds of simple two-beat and three-beat meters, where an accent falls on every first beat, even though, for example in
Bulgarian music, beat lengths of 1, 2, 3, 4 are used in the metric description. In addition, when focusing only on the stressed beats, the simple time signatures themselves will count as beats in the compound time. There will be two kinds of beats with the resulting compound time, of which the simple "three-beat" will be fairly longer than the "two-beat".
Folk music may make use of metric time bends, so that the proportions of the performed metric beat time lengths differ from the exact proportions indicated by the metric. Depending on playing style of the same meter, the time bend can vary from non-existent to considerable; in the latter case, some musicologists may want to assign a different meter. For example, the Bulgarian tune
Eleno Mome is written as 7=2+2+1+2, 13=4+4+2+3, 12=3+4+2+3, but an actual performance (e.g.
Smithsonian Eleno Mome) may be closer to 4+4+2+3.5. The Macedonian
3+2+2+3+2 meter is even more complicated, with heavier time bends, and the use of quadruples on the threes; the metric beat time proportions may vary with the speed the tune is being played. In Western classical music, metric time bend is used in the performance of the
Viennese Waltz. Most Western music uses metric ratios of 2:1, 3:1, or 4:1 (two-, three- or four-beat time signatures) — in other words, integer ratios which determine all beats to be of equal time length; so relative to that, 3:2 and 4:3 ratios corresponds to a very distinctive metric rhythm profiles — complex accentuation is used in Western music, but not as a part of the metric accentuation, instead viewed as
syncopation.
Brăiloiu borrowed a term from
Turkish medieval music theory: ''aksak'' (
Turkish for "crippled"). Such compound time signatures fall under the 'aksak rhythm' category that he introduced along with a couple more that should describe the rhythm figures in traditional music.
[1](''Aksak'' is sometimes spelled as ''aksaac'', because there isn't an exact transliteration from medieval Turkish into Latin alphabet.) The term Brăiloiu revived had a moderate success worldwide, but in Eastern Europe it is still frequently used. However, aksak rhythm figures are to be found not only in a few European countries, but on all continents, featuring various combinations of the "two" and "three" sequences. Yet the longest were found in Bulgaria; the shortest aksak rhythm figures would be the five-beat timing, comprising a "two" and a "three" (which can be also ordered as "three" followed by the "two").
Other variants
Some composers have used fractional beats: for example, the time signature 2½/4 appears in
Carlos Chávez's Sonata No. 3 (1928) IV, m. 1.

Example of Orff's time signatures
Music educator
Carl Orff proposed replacing the lower number of the time signature with the actual note value, as shown at right. This system eliminates the need for compound time signatures (described above), which are confusing to beginners. While this notation has not been adopted by music publishers generally (except in Orff's own compositions), it is used extensively in music education textbooks. Similarly, American composers
George Crumb and
Joseph Schwantner, among others, have used this system in many of their works.
Another possibility is to extend the barline where a time change is to take place above the top instrument's line in a score and to write the time signature there, and there only, saving the ink and effort that would have been spent writing it in each instrument's staff.
Henryk Górecki's ''Beatus Vir'' is an example of this.
Alternatively, music in a large score sometimes has time signatures written as very long, thin numbers covering the whole height of the score rather than replicating it on each staff; this is an aid to the conductor, who can see signature changes more easily.
"Irrational" meters
These are time signatures which have a
denominator which is not a power of two (1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, etc.). These are used to express the division of a
whole note (semibreve) into equal parts just as ordinary signatures do. For example, where 4/4 implies a bar construction of four quarter-parts of a whole note (i.e., four quarter notes), 4/3 implies a bar construction of four third-parts of it. These signatures are only of utility when juxtaposed with other signatures with varying denominators; a piece written entirely in 4/3, say, could be more legibly written out in 4/4.
It is arguable whether the use of these signatures makes metric relationships clearer or more obscure to the musician; it is always possible to write a passage using non-"irrational" signatures by specifying a relationship between some note length in the previous bar and some other in the succeeding one. Sometimes, successive metric relationships between bars are so convoluted that the pure use of irrational signatures would quickly render the notation extremely hard to penetrate. Good examples, written entirely in conventional signatures with the aid of between-bar specified metric relationships, occur a number of times in
John Adams' opera
Nixon in China (1987), where the sole use of "irrational" signatures would quickly produce massive numerators and denominators.
Historically, this device has been prefigured wherever composers have written
tuplets; for example, a 2/4 bar consisting of 3 triplet crotchets could arguably more sensibly be written as a bar of 3/6.
Henry Cowell's
piano piece "Fabric" (1920) throughout employs separate divisions of the bar (anything from 1 to 9) for the three
contrapuntal parts, using a scheme of shaped noteheads to make the differences visually clear, but the pioneering of these signatures is largely due to
Brian Ferneyhough.
Thomas Adès has also made extensive use of them, for example in his piano work "Traced Overhead" (1996), the second movement of which contains, among more conventional meters, bars in such signatures as 2/6, 9/14 and 5/24. A gradual process of diffusion into less rarefied musical circles seems to be underway, hence for example, John Pickard's work "Eden", commissioned for the 2006 finals of the National Brass Band Championships of Great Britain, which contains bars of 3/10.
Notationally, rather than using Cowell's elaborate series of notehead shapes, the same convention has been invoked as when normal tuplets are written; for example, one beat in 4/5 is written as a normal quarter note, four quarter notes complete the bar, but the whole bar lasts only 4/5 of a reference
whole note, and a beat 1/5 of one (or 4/5 of a normal quarter note). This is notated in exactly the same way that one would write if one were writing the first four quarter notes of five quintuplet quarter notes.
The appropriateness of the term "irrational" is moot; an
irrational number is one that cannot be written as a ratio of whole numbers, a rational number is one that can. By definition, these signatures are far better represented by the concept of rationality than irrationality. Nevertheless, the term appears to be established now, and the only potential problem is that of nomenclature should someone write a piece with a proportion such as the square root of 2 involved in a signature; a further hyperbolism would be necessary to describe these. In fact, at least one such piece already exists; one of
Conlon Nancarrow's "Studies for Player Piano" contains a canon where one part is augmented in the ratio sqrt(42):1.
Stress and meter
For all meters, the first beat (the
downbeat, ignoring any
anacrusis) is usually stressed (though not always, for example in
reggae where the
offbeats are stressed); in time signatures with four groups in the bar (such as 4/4 and 12/8), the third beat is often also stressed, though to a lesser degree. This gives a regular pattern of stressed and unstressed beats, although notes on the "stressed" beats are not necessarily louder or more important.
Rewriting meters
There is a sense in which ''all'' simple triple time signatures, be they 3/8, 3/4, 3/2 or anything else, and all compound duple times, such as 6/8, 6/16 and so on, are equivalent – a piece in 3/4 can be easily rewritten in 3/8 simply by halving the length of the notes. Sometimes, the choice of beat unit is simply down to tradition: the
minuet, for example, is generally written in 3/4, and though examples in 3/8 do exist, a minuet in 3/2 would be highly unconventional.
At other times, the choice of beat unit (the bottom number of a time signature) note can give subtle hints as to the character of the music: for example, time signatures with a longer beat unit (such as 3/2) can be used for pieces in a quick tempo to convey a sense of the time flying by. This may be counter-intuitive, but in the
Baroque and
Classical periods, typically meters with long note values (such as 3/2) were fast tempos, while slow movements were typically written with the eighth note as the beat.
Similarly, a piece in 2/4 can often sound as if it is in 4/4 (or vice versa) and a piece in 3/4 can sound as if it is in 6 or 12 compound time, particularly if the former is played quickly or the latter slowly. The distinction may be a matter of notation.
Early music usage
Mensural time signatures
In the 15th and 16th centuries, a period in which
mensural notation was used, there were four basic time signatures, which determined the proportion between the two main units of rhythm. There were no
measures or
barlines in music of this period; these signs, the ancestors of modern time signatures, indicate the ratio of
duration between different
note values. The relation between the
breve and the
semibreve was called 'tempus', and the relation between the
semibreve and the
minim was called 'prolatio'. Unlike modern notation, the duration ratios between these different values was not always 2:1; it could be either 2:1 or 3:1, and that is what these mensural signatures indicated. A ratio of 3:1 was called ''complete'', perhaps a reference to the
Trinity, and a ratio of 2:1 was called ''incomplete''.
A circle used as a time signature indicated ''tempus perfectum'' (a circle being a symbol of completeness), while an incomplete circle, resembling a letter C, indicated ''tempus imperfectum''. Assuming the breve to be a beat, this corresponds to the modern concepts of
triple meter and
duple meter, respectively. In either case, a dot in the center indicated ''prolatio perfecta'' while the absence of such a dot indicated ''prolatio imperfecta'', corresponding to
simple meter and
compound meter.
A rough equivalence of these signs to modern meters would be:
★
corresponds to 9/8 meter
★
corresponds to 3/4 meter
★
corresponds to 6/8 meter
★
corresponds to 2/4 meter
N.B. in modern compound meters the beat is a dotted note value, such as a dotted quarter, because the ratios of the modern note value hierarchy are always 2:1. Dotted notes were never used in this way in the mensural period; the main beat unit was always a simple (undotted) note value.
Proportions
Another set of signs in
mensural notation specified the metric proportions of one section to another, similar to a
metric modulation. A few common signs are shown:
★

mensural_proportion1.gif
1:2 proportion (twice as fast)
★

mensural_proportion2.gif
1:3 proportion (three times as fast)
★

mensural_proportion4.gif
2:3 proportion (similar to triplets)
Often the ratio was expressed as two numbers, one above the other, looking similar to a modern time signature, although it could have values such as 4/3, which a time signature could not.
There is still controversy regarding the meaning of some proportional signs, and they may not have been used consistently from one place or century to another. In addition, certain composers delighted in creating "puzzle" compositions which were intentionally difficult to decipher.
In particular, when the sign

mensural_proportion1.gif
was encountered, the
tactus (beat) changed from the usual
semibreve to the
breve, a circumstance called ''alla breve''. This term has been sustained to the present day, and although now it means the beat is a
minim (half note), in contradiction to the literal meaning of the phrase, it still indicates that the beat has changed to a longer note value.
In the 17th century, additional signs such as

mensural_proportion5.gif
also indicated proportions like this.
See also
★
Math rock
★
List of musical works in unusual time signatures
★
Schaffel
★
Progressive rock
★
Tala
References
1.
★ Oprea, Gheorghe (2002). ''Musical Folklore in Romania''. ISBN 973-42-0304-5.
External links
★
Grateful Dead songs with unusual time signatures (
Grateful Dead)