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Time Signatures - Time Signature Chart

This document provides a chart of common time signatures along with explanations of simple and compound time. It begins by defining duple, triple, and quadruple time and notes that simple time signatures divide the main beat into two sub-beats while compound signatures divide into three sub-beats. The chart then lists examples of simple and compound signatures in both duple, triple and quadruple time, showing how the beats are beamed. It concludes by noting other rare signatures exist but this covers the most common found in music.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
500 views

Time Signatures - Time Signature Chart

This document provides a chart of common time signatures along with explanations of simple and compound time. It begins by defining duple, triple, and quadruple time and notes that simple time signatures divide the main beat into two sub-beats while compound signatures divide into three sub-beats. The chart then lists examples of simple and compound signatures in both duple, triple and quadruple time, showing how the beats are beamed. It concludes by noting other rare signatures exist but this covers the most common found in music.

Uploaded by

KELLY NEOH
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Time Signatures | Time Signature Chart


Created: Wednesday, 12 October 2011 20:44 Written by Victoria Williams

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Time Signature Chart Learn more...

This time signature chart shows the most common regular time signatures.

A regular time signature is one which represents 2, 3 or 4 main beats per bar. 

Duple time means 2 main beats per bar

Triple time means 3 main beats per bar


We have 4118 guests and one
Quadruple time means 4 main beats per bar online

The time signature chart also shows you which are simple and compound time signatures. Video Courses by MyMu
Simple time signatures have a main beat which divides into two 1st level sub-beats.

Compound time signatures have a main beat which divides into three 1st level sub-beats.

In both simple and compound time, 2nd level sub-beats always subdivide by two (never by three).

  See all Video Cour

 Any time signatures which do not have 2, 3 or 4 main beats per bar are classed as irregular. They are not shown in this time

signature chart. Please note: this website is not run by the

  completely independent business.

Time Signature Chart


Victoria Williams

    Main beat/1st sub-beat/2nd sub-beat Comments YouTube 7K

In simpe duple time, there are two main beats per bar.
Simple duple 2/4   
The 1st and 2nd level sub-beats are beamed to show two beats per
bar. Next UK ABRSM Paper-base

Exams Grades 6-8:


Tue 16th November 2021
[Gra
 

2/2  available online on demand fro

The countdown has ended

While you're waiting - Sign up


 
Today!
3/8 

  See https://gb.abrsm.org/en/ex
In simple triple time, there are three main beats per bar.
 Simple triple 3/4  The 1st level sub-beats are beamed in sixes, and the 2nd level sub-
beats are beamed to show three beats per bar.
booking/exam-dates-and-fees

ABRSM dates.

3/2
Next UK Trinity Paper-based

Exams Grades 1-8:


  Sat 6th November 2021
4/8
The countdown has ended

See

  https://www.trinitycollege.com/
Simple In simple quadruple time, there are four main beats per bar.
4/4 The 1st level sub-beats are beamed across two main beats. The 2nd exams/theory/exam-dates for
quadruple   level sub-beats show four beats per bar.
dates

4/2

6/8

Compound

duple 
 

6/4

9/8

Compound In compound  time, the main beats are dotted.


The 1st level sub-beat is beamed in threes, and the second level sub-
triple  beat is beamed in sixes.
 

9/4

12/8

Compound

quadruple 
 

12/4

You will probably come across other time signatures which are not on this chart. In Bach's first book of 48 Preludes and Fugues,

for example, you can find the time signatures 12/16 and 24/16. Time signatures with a lower number 16 are rare, but do crop up

from time to time. However, the chart shows you the most common regular time signatures which you are likely to find today.

Taking an exam? Read our free online lessons on time signatures for grade 1, grade 2, grade 3, grade 4 and grade 5 ABRSM

music theory exams.

How do time signatures work? Watch this short video!


How do Time Signatures Work? (Grade 5 …

How Time Signatures Work - Information from the Video


Time signatures give you information about the "main beat" in a piece of music, and how that beat is divided up.

Main Beats
Most music has 2, 3 or 4 "main beats" per bar. This is the pulse you would tap your foot or clap to. Music with 2, 3 or 4 pulses per

bar is called "regular".

Some music written since the turn of the 20th century has an "irregular" main beat, meaning that there are not 2, 3 or 4 main

beats per bar, but some other number. Common irregular pulses are 5 or 7 main beats per bar. (e.gs in simple time).

Music with 2 main beats per bar is in "duple" time. Three beats per bar="triple" time, and 4 beats="quadruple" time.

Subdivided Beats & Regular Patterns


Each of the main beats can be split into smaller note values. This is called a "subdivision".

There are only two ways to split a main beat - into two halves, or into three thirds.

This gives us six possible regular patterns for time signatures.

Simple and Compound Time


When the main beat is divided up into two, it is "simple time". The top number of the time signature is 2, 3 or 4, depending on how

many main beats per bar there are.

When it subdivides into three, it is "compound time". The top number of the time signature is 6 (2 beats), 9 (3 beats) or 12 (4

beats).

Types of Main Beat


The reason why we have more than 6 regular time signatures is because we can use different lengths of note for the main beat.

The note used for the main beat is most often the quaver, crotchet or minim, the dotted crotchet or the dotted minim.

An undotted main beat always subdivides into two (simple time), but a dotted main beat always subdivides into three (compound

time).

The lower number of the time signature shows you what type of beat to count. 2=minim, 4=crotchet or dotted minim, 8=quaver or

dotted crotchet and 16=semiquaver.

 
Further Subdivisions
Each subdivision can, of course, be divided up again into even smaller notes. All further sub-divisions are into two, whatever the

time signature. (If you want to subdivide into three, you need a triplet.

Irregular Time
Irregular time signatures are always simple (the main beat divides into two).

The top number will tell you how many main beats there are per bar, and the bottom number tells you what type of beat.

E.g. 5/8 is five quavers per bar, or 11/16 is eleven semiquavers.

Aural Differences
To our ears, it is very difficult to tell the difference between these time signatures with the same basic pattern. Generally though,

when the main beat is a quaver, the tempo is quick, and when it is a minim the tempo is slow.

Notation Differences
It is easy to tell the difference between time signatures with different basic patterns, because the notes in the bar will be grouped

according to their pattern.

When there are two main beats per bar, the notes are grouped into two equal-sized blocks, three beats per bar = three blocks and

so on.

Notes are grouped with the use of a) note values which fall on the beat (not off it), b) beaming and c) ties.

Try to draw blocks around each beat of the bar.

Each block must be the same size.

Notes which are the main beat, have to fall at the start of the block.

Ties are used when a note begins in one block but ends in another.

Beams don't cross blocks.

Beams are not broken within blocks.

  

Triplets & Duplets


Sometimes we will want to split a main beat into three in a simple time, instead of the usual two. Or in a compound time, we might

want to split the beat into two instead of three.

When the main beat is divided into a number which is not the one expected, we draw a bracket over the affected notes and write a

number to show the subdivision we want. (If the notes are already joined with a beam, you don't need a bracket as well).

For example in simple time the main beat can be subdivided into three with a bracket and a three, called a "triplet". In compound

time, we can write a two, which makes a "duplet".

Watch out- a triplet doesn't always have three notes in it! A crotchet plus a quaver can make a triplet (because added together they

make up the same as 3 quavers).

The Anacrusis
An anacrusis is a bar which begins a composition which has fewer than the expected number of notes in it. When counting bars,

bar 1 is always the first full bar. The last bar of a piece has to take into account any anacrusis.

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