Metre is the measurement of a musical line into measures of stressed and
unstressed beats, indicated in Western notation by a symbol called a
time
signature. Properly, "metre" describes the whole concept of measuring
rhythmic units, but it can also be used as a specific descriptor for a measurement of an individual piece as
represented by the time signature—for example, "This piece is in 4/4 metre" is equivalent to "This piece is in 4/4 time" or
"This piece has a 4/4 time signature".
A measure has two purposes in Western traditions of music, the first is to block out a series of
beats, and the second is to form the building block of larger sections of
music, such as a phrase. Time signatures imply strongly accented beats, and others that
are less accented, changing time signature changes the pattern of emphasizing notes, either by playing certain notes louder, or
by sustaining them as in
swing or
rubato. A measure is similar to a metrical foot in
poetry.
There are four different types of metre in common use:
-
simple duple (ex. 4/4)
- simple
triple (ex. 3/4)
- compound
duple (ex. 6/8)
-
compound triple (ex. 9/8).
If each beat in a measure is divided into two parts, it is simple metre, and if divided into three it is compound. If each
measure is divided into two beats, it is duple metre, and if three it is triple. Some people also label quadruple, while some
consider it as two duples. The latter is more consistent with the above labelling system, as any other division above triple,
such as quintuple, is considered as duple+triple (12123) or triple+duple (12312), depending on the accents in the musical
example. However, in some music a quintuple may be treated and perceived as one unit of five, especially at faster tempos.
|
Duple: |
Triple: |
| Simple: |
beats divided in two; two beats per measure |
beats divided in three; two beats per measure |
| Compound: |
beats divided in two; three beats per measure |
beats divided in three; three beats per measure |
|
Beats divided in two: |
Beats divided in three: |
| Two beats per measure: |
simple duple |
simple triple |
| Three beats per measure: |
compound duple |
compound triple |
"Once a metric hierarchy has been established, we, as listeners, will maintain that organization as long as minimal evidence
is present." (Lester 1986, p.77) Duple time is far more common than triple (Krebs 2005, p.16). Most popular music is in 4/4 time,
though often may be in 2/2 or cut time such as in bossa nova. Doo-wop and some other rock styles are frequently in 12/8, or may
be interpreted as 4/4 with heavy swing. Similarly, most classical music before the 20th century tended to stick to relatively
straightforward metres such as 4/4, 3/4 and 6/8, though variations on these such as 3/2 and 6/4 are also found. By the 20th
century, composers were using less regular metres, such as 5/4 and 7/8. An example a use of this metre is
Dave Brubeck's 'Take Five' written in 5/4 time.
Also in the 20th century, it became relatively more common to switch metre frequently—the end of
Igor Stravinsky's
The Rite of Spring is a particularly extreme example—and the use of
asymmetrical rhythms where each beat is a different length became
more common: such metres include already discussed quintuple rhythms as well as more complex constructs along the lines of
2+5+3/4 time, where each bar has a 2 beat unit, a five beat unit and a 3 beat unit, with a stress at the beginning of each
unit—there are similar metres used in various folk musics. Other music has no metre at all (free time) such as
drone based music exemplified by
La Monte Young, feature rhythms so complex that any metre is obscured such as in serialism, or is based on
additive rhythms, such as some music by
Philip
Glass.
Metre is often combined with a rhythmic pattern to produce a particular style. This is true of dance music, such as the
waltz or
tango, which have particular
patterns of emphasizing beats which are instantly recognizable. This is often done to make the music coincide with slow or fast
steps in the dance, and can be thought of as the musical equivalent of prosody.
Sometimes, a particular musician or composition becomes identifed with a particular metric pattern; such is the case with the
so-called Bo Diddley pattern. Some examples:

Polymetre is the use of two metres simultaneously, or in regular alternation. Examples include
Bela Bartok's "Second String Quartet". A stunning example from the rock canon is
"Kashmir" by the seminal British hard-rock quartet
Led Zeppelin, in which
the percussion articulates 4/4 while the melodic instruments present a mesmerizing riff in 3/4. In "Toads Of The Short Forest"
(from the album "Weasels Ripped My Flesh"), composer
Frank Zappa explains:
"At this very moment on stage we have drummer A playing in 7/8, drummer B playing in 3/4, the bass playing in 3/4, the organ
playing in 5/8, the tambourine playing in 3/4, and the alto sax blowing his nose." (Contemporary musicologists disagree whether a
musician "blowing his nose" constitutes a legitimate musical metre.)
Metric structure includes metre,
tempo, and all
rhythmic aspects which produce temporal regularity or structure, against which the foreground details or
durational patterns are projected (DeLone et. al. (Eds.), 1975, chap.
3).
Rhythmic units be metric, intrametric, contrametric, or
extrametric.
Metric levels may be distinguished. The
beat level is the metric
level at which pulses are heard as the basic time unit of the piece. Faster levels are
division levels, and slower levels are
multiple
levels. (DeLone et. al. (Eds.), 1975, chap. 3).
Hypermeter is large-scale meter (as opposed to surface-level meter) created by hypermeasures which consist of
hyperbeats. (Stein 2005,
p.329)
A
metric modulation is a
modulation from one metric unit or metre to another.
Deep structure
C.S. Lee (1985) has described
musical meter in terms of
deep structure, where, through
rewrite
rules, different meters (4/4, 3/4, etc) generate many different surface rhythms. For example the first phrase of
The Beatles' "A Hard Day's Night", without the syncopation, may be generated from its meter of 4/4:
4/4 4/4 4/4
/ \ / \ / \
2/4 2/4 2/4 2/4 2/4 2/4
| / \ | | | \
| 1/4 1/4 | | | \
| / \ / \ | | |
| 1/8 1/8 1/8 1/8 | | |
| | | | | | | |
It's been a hard days night
(Middleton 1990, p.211).