• Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

Breaking Barlines

Online Music Theory Lessons: Turn Sound Into Skill

  • Home
  • Teaching Samples
  • Music Theory Lessons
  • Blog
  • About Aron Bernstein
  • FAQ
  • Membership Account
    • Log In
    • Your Profile
    • Membership Billing
    • Membership Cancel

timesignature

July 11, 2022 By Aron Bernstein 1 Comment

Weekly Music Challenge: 7/11/22

Test your theory chops with the weekly challenge from Breaking Barlines! You’ll find a new question here every Monday. Please comment to post your reply.

This Week’s Challenge:

The meter is running! This is one of my favorite gems from my favorite composer. As always, I’ll reveal the source on Friday, so so spoilers please if you already know it! I’ve blacked out the time signature, so that’s your challenge this week. What meter is this in?

Listen to Audio

Post your reply and come back Friday, July 15th for the answer!

ANSWER for 7/11/22

Believe it or not, this week’s challenge was brought to you by Johannes Brahms! This is variation 7 from Book 2 of Brahms’s Variations on a Theme of Paganini, Op. 35. He chose to give this one two time signatures, 2/4 for the right hand and 3/8 for the left. To further complicate things, each left hand beat is carved into a triplet, making for a nice and simple NINE AGAINST FOUR between the hands! Even worse, Brahms actually starts each left hand triplet on a pickup before the first measure, so all the sixteenth note triplets are displaced backward, with beams crossing the barlines. However, the ultimate effect between the hands is 4 against 3, so it would have been more accurate to make the entire passage in 2/4 and have triplet quarter notes on the left, rather than triplet eighths. But don’t despair: if you’re interested in playing this, The next measures after these turn the right hand eighths into broken octave sixteenths. Who doesn’t need a little 8 AGAINST 9 in their lives? Brahms, you’re killing us.

Learn More Here!

With Breaking Barlines, fun music theory is no contradiction in terms! Have a look at the complete Breaking Barlines Course! 44 lessons and counting, each one grounded in the music you want to hear. Then sign up for a monthly subscription for full access to all video lessons, worksheets, and answer keys. New videos are always added, so stay tuned!

Filed Under: music theory challenge Tagged With: #meter, brahms, breakingbarlines, classicalmusic, music, musiceducation, musiclessons, musictheory, musicvideo, polymeter, popmusic, rhythm, timesignature

July 26, 2021 By Aron Bernstein 5 Comments

Weekly Music Theory Challenge 7/26/21

Show off your theory chops with my weekly challenge! You’ll find a new question here every Monday. Please comment to post your reply.

This week’s challenge:

Here’s one of my favorite pieces by Johannes Brahms (I won’t tell you the title just yet!). Listen carefully while you watch the score:

Audio

What is the time signature for this music?

Reply to post your answer, and check back on Friday, July 30th to see if you’re right!

ANSWER for 7/26/21

6.4: Yep, that’s right! This is the first movement of Brahms’s Violin Sonata in G Major, Op. 78. The meter is actually 6/4, compound duple, but you wouldn’t know it by just listening to either the violin part or the piano right hand! Both parts make use of the hemiola, a cross-rhythm that gives the impression of 3/2 (simple triple). But notice how the piano’s melody is completely offset from the violin’s, sounding like its downbeat is in a different place altogether. This puts the piano melody totally at odds with the barline. To make matters even more complex, both parts are rhythmically differentiated: their notes never coincide, making them interlock. All this plays out against the actual beat, marked down at the bottom of the music:

This kind of rhythmic sophistication and metric fluidity are typical of Brahms, who had extensive knowledge of 16th Century Renaissance music. He had scores from Palestrina, Lassus, Josquin, and Isaac, whose music had no barlines, and a complexity that made each part sound like it had a different meter and downbeat.

For more Brahms banditry, CLICK HERE for a fun bonus Youtube video: totally FREE!

Want to Learn More?

Check out my whole series of videos on rhythm and meter in the Rhythm Module! Sign up for a monthly subscription for full access to all video lessons, worksheets, and answer keys. Also, stay tuned for new lessons in advanced rhythms. I created Breaking Barlines with one thing in mind: making music theory effective and FUN!

Filed Under: music theory challenge Tagged With: brahms, breakingbarlines, classicalmusic, meter, music, musiceducation, musiclessons, musictheory, popmusic, rhythm, timesignature

April 12, 2021 By Aron Bernstein 2 Comments

Weekly Music Theory Challenge: 4/12/21

Show off your music theory chops with my weekly challenge! You’ll find a new question posted here every Monday, and you can comment to post your reply.

This week’s challenge:

What is the correct time signature for a measure with five beats and the dotted eighth note as the beat?

CHECK BACK on Friday, 4/16 for the answer!

ANSWER for 4/12/21

The correct time signature is 15/16. This is compound quintuple meter: five beats in the measure, and the dotted eighth note is the beat. The problem with compound meter, of course, is that the bottom number shows the division of the beat (the 16th notes, in this case), rather than the beat itself.

Want to learn more?

Sign up for a membership and get full access to all video lessons, worksheets, and answer keys!

Filed Under: music theory challenge Tagged With: beat, meter, music, musictheory, rhythm, theory, timesignature

Footer

Contact Breaking Barlines

  • Tell us about yourself. What is your experience level in music? What would you like to see in an online music theory course? Your input will become future video lessons.

Copyright © 2023 Breaking Barlines · WordPress Website by Waterlink Web