-Mike
You Never Know timing
You Never Know timing
This has been screwing with me for a while... At the end of the 0:14 mark on the album, Carter hits the cymbals (and this is why it's throwing me off - it's on an upstroke). I can't figure out wether or not to start the first chord formation over again at that mark or finish the rythm regardless of the cymbal crash. If I ignore it, it falls into place nicely, but it's not in sync for that one momont where you hear the crash. I know I must sound like an idiot, but does anyone know what I'm talking about?
-Mike
-Mike
- KevinGTArch
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don't let that cymbal crash throw you off. the song is in 3/8, and if you really try, you can constantly count off 1-2-3 throughout the whole thing. the cymbal crash happens to come on beat 3 which is why it sound odd. but the actually guitar riff starts the beat AFTER the cymbal, beat 1. you can hear it better starting at 0:29, carter hits the snare after the cymbal crash, that's beat 1 and where the riff starts. hope this helps!
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I did some digging and found this quote from an old article (5-18-2002) by Brian Pace at nancies.org.
"'You Never Know' plays in a variant of 3/8 time with the emphasis on the 8th note. On the verses, Carter plays in duplets instead of triplets against the 3/8. In the meantime, he puts in a fake downbeat that is a backbeat of a duplet, making dancing to it a real adventure. The bridge has alternating 5/8 and 3/8 bars, with the 3/8 bars having a feel of 3/4 with the accent falling on every two eighth notes instead of on every three eighth notes. This time signature treatment is common in classical (see: Schubert and Brahms), but I've never heard it outside of classical and jazz."
http://www.nancies.org/articles/020518.php
No way can I match this guy's music theory but I can hear a bit of what he's talking about. It may clear up why we can't decide on 3/8 and 5/8.
Peace,
Kev
"'You Never Know' plays in a variant of 3/8 time with the emphasis on the 8th note. On the verses, Carter plays in duplets instead of triplets against the 3/8. In the meantime, he puts in a fake downbeat that is a backbeat of a duplet, making dancing to it a real adventure. The bridge has alternating 5/8 and 3/8 bars, with the 3/8 bars having a feel of 3/4 with the accent falling on every two eighth notes instead of on every three eighth notes. This time signature treatment is common in classical (see: Schubert and Brahms), but I've never heard it outside of classical and jazz."
http://www.nancies.org/articles/020518.php
No way can I match this guy's music theory but I can hear a bit of what he's talking about. It may clear up why we can't decide on 3/8 and 5/8.
Peace,
Kev
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gravedigger
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Hmm. I've always felt the bridge as being 3 bars of 5/8 with one bar of 6/8 at the end (5-5-5-6). It all works out to 21 beats in the end, so it doesn't really matter, I suppose.
.....
Actually, I just listened to it (many times, actually). I think the guy that Pace quoted above is right. It does feel a bit more "proper" when feeling it as 5-3-5-3-5.
.....
Actually, I just listened to it (many times, actually). I think the guy that Pace quoted above is right. It does feel a bit more "proper" when feeling it as 5-3-5-3-5.