POLYRHYTHM- Learn and MASTER 3:4 and 4:3 [MUSIC THEORY - RHYTHM- COUNTING]
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- čas přidán 7. 06. 2024
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I have been so scared to make this video- It's a really hard topic to learn and teach, and there's not much interest in the topic. HOWEVER I feel that polyrhythm is a fantasticly fun and productive concept to practice. In this video, we learn about what polyrhythm is, then learn about resultant and composite rhythms and how they can help us learn to perform a 3:4 polyrhythm.
We go way beyond just "passing the golden butter" in this video to explore the musical aspects of these rhythms and how we can apply them in real world scenarios, with a significant stress on how a polyrhythm can be interpreted two different ways with two different dominant beats.
If you like progressive rock, djent, math metal, indian music, or anything else that is hard to dance to, you'll probably enjoy working with this concept. I wish you the best of luck with this one- it's tough stuff!
If you're curious what a polyrhythm sounds like you can skip to the example at 13:02
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Table of Contents:
00:00 Intro
00:22 What Are Polyrhythms?
01:53 Composite Rhythms
04:00 The Dominant Three
07:01 The Dominant Four
10:59 Finger-Style Polyrhythms
13:11 Wrapping Up
Some additional notes- 12/8 is the king of signatures for creating a 3:4 polyrhythm. Try creating a melody or riff in 12/8 then experiment with the rhythm section switching between either steady 3 or steady 4, or BOTH at the same time. Also, polymeters CREATE polyrhythms if you remove the "in between" notes. Watch my video on polymeter and you'll see the relationship- if you play the FIRST NOTE of every polymetric section, what you have is a polyrhythm!
Jake, do you have any actual online or downloadable courses? I find that videos on specific topics are great when you want to zone in on a particular technique or idea but its easy too get overwhelmed and hit roadblocks. A structured course from you I think would be amazing. Particularly focusing on metal and prog styles. I'd definitely buy it.
@@graemeozzie2251 me too!
I love you.
simple as that (:
Signals Music Studio Can you make a video about how to recognize certain time signatures in different genres? Can you cover how to tell the difference between double-time and slow common-time? Also, how is common-time done in R&B/Hip Hop as opposed to in rock?
Also, I’ve been undecided for a long time about what time signature/rhythm Michael Jackson’s song “Heartbreaker” has and what genre(s) it is. Do you know?
The fact we cannot keep track of both at the same time is studied in cognitive semantics and is an inherent human aka homo sapiens trait.
This is just one of the best music education videos out there. Huge high fives!!!
THANK YOU!
Whoa! Getting props form Aimee Nolte is high praise, indeed.
Agree
Aimee Nolte meets Nili Brosh. That would be amazing.
Yes it is and ur a beautiful
This guy is so good, not only can he talk while playing polyrhythms, when he plays 4/4 guitar over them he burst into flames! Good stuff.
😂
"What's my purpose?"
"You pass the stinking butter."
"... oh... my god!"
"Yeah, welcome to the club, pal."
Fuck I love everything about this comment thread
Edit: typo
I forgot there was a like button CZcams comments until this one.
I am a professional West African drum instructor. That said, I'm thoroughly impressed by the simplistic yet conclusive way you introduced polyrhythms here. You are a phenomenal instructor of music!
Instructions unclear; I'm covered in butter now.
Nate P WoW sO fUnNy AnD rAnDoM
@@lartan18 not made for small minds
ha, yes!
Unclear? There was one very distinct directive: Pass it! Not slather yourself in it! 🤣
Does it stinky?
I like that instead of asking me to join his Patreon, he said: "If you did like this video, you can thank my Patreon supporters for making it possible."
yeah Jake is a real class act, such a humble guy
I was about to live on 4/4 forever and cry over the fact that I can't groove in 3/4 until this video, just saved my life.
"Musical or chaotic" Chopin: Hold my beer!
THANK YOU! I've been learning the Fantasie Impromptu by Chopin which has a 4/3 polyrhythm and this explanation helped SO MUCH.
Youngboy better
By far the best practical explanation of polyrhythms I'ver ever seen. Musicians tend to be pretty bad at explaining things easily. This guy is an exception. I'm sure he's an excellent musician but he's even better as a teacher.
Dude, this video is legitimately flawless - excellent stuff!
omg, that is high praise, thank you Levi!
@@SignalsMusicStudio The part I liked best was a throwaway comment towards the end where you talk about combining polymeters. I did a column for Premier Guitar on polymetric concepts and the comments consisted of people telling me that the more common term is polyrythms... no matter how much I explained the difference, they didn't get it...
@@LeviClay Can you share the link to your column? Sounds fun... And yeah, through running this channel and reading comments, I can percieve that there is a huge misunderstanding about polyrhythm vs polymeter. I plan on doing a lot of rhythm and poly-based stuff this yr on this channel and I needed a good foundation groundwork video (besides my polymeter video) to reference later on. The stuff that blew my mind lately was Digital Gerrymandering by Intronaut- the nastiest combos of polymetric polyrhythms I've heard in a loooong time!
@@SignalsMusicStudio Of course!
www.premierguitar.com/articles/26211-obsessive-progressive-how-to-decode-advanced-polymeters
I have the Intronaut track on now... yeah... this is music to make you seasick! haha But it's VERY cool. Going to add the album to my spotify for the gym later - it's excellent!
I really grew up on the prog thing, but none of the bands I dug (Symphony X, Ron Jarzombek, Opeth etc) were big on the polyrhythmic stuff, so it's a huge weakness in my ear now. When I work on it I feel an aneurysm coming - but I've really got into Meshuggah in the last year or so as I've come back to metal - so it's something I want to have a better control off. You can only compose the stuff you can imagine right? Gotta expose yourself to it to imagine it :(
Really looking forward to whatever you come up with!
Really good article! But good god that comment section :(
I guess the only thing we can do is make more rhythm based content and hopefully clear up the air. I find the ultra-complex polymetal stuff to be hilarious and fun, but it's not the stuff I really want to listen to. I feel it'll be a great medium through which to teach rhythms though, since djent and math metal is somewhat "in" right now. And I finally have a 7 string so more poly-metal stuff is inevitible.
Most of my knowledge of the stuff comes from the little I've learned about indian music, specifically Konnakol. Carnatic music is saturated in polyrhythm, polymeter, and even weirder concepts like Tihais and reductive measures. Just scratching the surface is enough to make you realize that us westerners are woefully unprepared to handle those sorts of concepts but I just flat out find it fascinating and fun, albeit rarely practical, lol.
Incredibly clear teaching and pacing. This needs to be shown by every music teacher.
This video really helped me wrap my head around the concept....I would say this is the best videos I found on the topic.
The phrases I recommend are:
3:4 GIVE adVICE to MOther
4:3 GIVE MOther SOME adVICE
Hello everyone , i tried to cover calling you by jeff buckley. Can you check it out and leave your ideas as comments ? Thanks in advance :)
Does "Give mother to the left some stinking butter" create a 6:7 polyrithm?
Luka Pavlič A drummer friend of mine taught me "Eat your goddamned broccoli" (broccoli said as two syllables)
@@victoza9232 Or "Eat Your BELOVED broccoli"
I learned a phrase from Adam Neely
“Pass the f*cking butter”
Excellent tutorial! (claps in 4:3) 👏👏👏
I can tell how knowledgeable you are by how easily comprehensible you make it. Great stuff here my friend!!!
Damn it I went into seizure trying to count
Hahahaha I'm glad I'm not alone
Polyrhythms are the leading cause of seizure in dudes 15-27.
Came back after 1 year and my head still exploded.
yea, feel you, beat boxed poly till throat and fingers red lined. Now, I just count in eights and try to keep the mind's loop box going pass the sometime "invisible end" of the measure, whether I like it or not.
Make a tutorial of how to dance polyrhythms
Go to a Meshuggah show and you'll find out
I do the polyrhythm walk- feet walk the 4, swing your arms in 3. It's extremely awkward and looks really wierd.
@@SignalsMusicStudio please I need to see that!!
ps. ur videos are great!
Yes, please do!
posts video of a meshuggah mosh pit... done haha
Excellent instruction! Great video
I’ve watched a lot of vids explaining polyrhythms and this far and away the best. It clearly lit the light bulb in my head. Thank you!
My brain hurts now but this is easily the best video I've seen that explains this concept! Love your lessons! 🤘
This is genuinely one of the easiest to follow but at the same time concise videos ive ever watched
Im a beginner drummer and I’ve been practicing just shy of a year and I’ve been stuck in the 4/4 rut with no idea how to understand 3/4 let alone translate it on the kit. This video helped me understand so now I can take that knowledge and FINALLY start practicing. Thank you so much for the easy to understand explanation :)))
Me too been playing for about a year and 3/4 is my achilles heal. I can quite get it right.
That's amazing... I improvised this 3:4 polyrhythm when playing percussion for years and years and never knew what I'm doing or why it sounds so awesome.
Thanks for clearing that up
This is fantastic. The way you break it down is the most teachable method I've ever seen (over 20+ years of music experience and discussion and teachers). Great job!
"When I first discovered polyrhythm it was like somebody showed me a brand new spatial dimension" - We call it eastern europe
Thank you so much my music teacher never taught me how to play polyrhythms 😭 you’re a life saver
As a drummer, I appreciate that you’ve made this vid! Thank you!
I think that was the best, most concise, and percussively literate explanation of polyrhythms I've heard in fifty+ years of playing music. Awesomely well done!
I could never get tired of the way this guy explains stuff, his passion and knowledge, and his soothing made for radio/tv voice - awesome channel!
What?!? This is nuts! I would’ve never thought of this! This is awesome! Thanks for your time and sharing your expertise.
This guy explains this concept like a boss!!. My piano teacher could never explain me polyrhythms as well as this guy!!!. Thumbs up!!!. Thanks!!!!
6:47 caught me off guard, immediately subscribed and added the rest of your channel to watch later. Love it.
youre one of the best music teachers, and its free
I said it before, I'll say it again: He is the best music theory teacher I've ever seen. Easy to understand, to the point, just AWESOME!!!
I’ve now only seen two of your videos but this is my first time subscribing to a youtube channel. You make awesome content very consicely and it’s really helpful and you’re gnarly at guitar. Thanks!
My favorite music teacher so far on CZcams. Keep it up! :)
bruh i’ve never had someone explain this so well🙌🏼
This channel is perfect
This is one of the best videos ive ever seen of anything, your teaching style is perfect
I'm a drummer who also teaches social studies. I'm doing a lesson on West African drumming today in my global history class, and I brought in my djembe. This video is PERFECT for explaining to any non-musicians in the class. Thank you so much!
THE DJENT STICK MAKES THE APPEARANCE
lol I was just gonna text you so you could see it's on-screen debut!
@@SignalsMusicStudio ah yes! I'm so glad it is seeing the polyrhythmic life that it deserves
IT WAS A PRETTY DAMN GOOD REFERENCE
This has to be one of the best explanations of this I've seen on youtuve
Thank you so much for this. clear and straight forward video. It imparted a better understanding of the basic mechanics of this polyrhythm than I've ever had before. What a treat.
One of the best teacher i have seen! Simple language, easy to visualize, great examples... Brilliant!!!!
Thank you so much for explaining this! Playing the piano part of an Intermezzo for Horn by Gliere (Op. 35/11) and I could not figure for the life of me how to put 3 against 4 together. This has helped a great deal.
"Some were downright offensive"
You have angered Adam Neely
anger
*A N G E R Y*
*Nested Tuplets intensify*
Danny carey says hello
Loved! Thank you! I've always been obsessed with polyrhythms. I'm primarily a drummer but I enjoy learning rhythms better on other instruments as examples of how to use them with chords, notes, melodies, rather than just the drums so these types of tutorials are perfect for me, thanks!
I understood the concepts of polyrhythm and I have even 'accidently' wrote polyrhythmic riffs but I've never understood how to count them from both perspectives. After 27 years of playing, I still have a lifetime to learn. Thanks bro! I appreciate your instruction but more importantly, your perspective!
I like how it sort of "opens up" when you switch the accented 3 to 4 and vice versa. It changes the motion in a very subtle way.
Musicianship: 10/10. Teaching skill: over 9000.
hutchmusician IT’S OVER 9,000!!! Breaks the radar*
Thanks! I dig the mental switch between the two counts.
Best part of the video - expressing what it is, why you think it's interesting, and you did it while leaving it clear that opinions can vary and not making anyone feel like this has to be liked or disliked. Nothing makes learning easier than when you don't have to feel like someone is stitching personal opinions to the subject and cramming it down your throat!
There have been other videos on this topic that make me thing "oh, I get it!" but now that I watch this... I didn't get it. Thanks for filling in the gaps that I didn't even know existed.
Brilliant video man, never heard of the 'pass the stinking butter before'; works really well! I just put one of the rhythms an octave higher when I was learning them. I reckon the butter is a far superior system.
You're amazing!!!! You just unlocked this for me! Thanks for your time!
Congrats, you just got a subscriber and an advocate. It's so unusual to find someone capable of conveying knowledge in a format that readily pickup up by others. You have that gift my friend, cudos and thanx. Be seeing ya...
I don't really know sheet music but I understood everything you said. I can play along with periphery and meshuggah because of you now. Great video pal!
I just started practicing polyrhythms on my drums and this video has opened up so many possibilities in it. ❤️❤️❤️
Outstanding lesson!!! Thank you so very much
It's amazing! Thank you!
dude you're one of the most talented smart intelligent musicians i found on earth 😂
I'm showing this technique to my students. You, sir, have done me and those I teach a great service.
Your tutorial incorporates all of the most important and effective considerations, teaching techniques and examples. A true leader in tomorrow's most powerful education revolutions. Thank you does not express my gratitude adequately.
Thanks for this! Love your rhythm tone!
Absolutely loved it :D
I found myself just giggling in excitement thinking of all the possible applications, a whole neeeew world! Never quite got through the door of dealing with polyrhythm, thanks for showing me da wae^^
Thank you so much for your work, your videos on modes and now this! It's (very literally) inspiring :D
Now I gotta compose something some modal polyrhythmic folk music, soooo motivating!
This is by far the best 3/4 polyrhythm music education videos.
You got my signature!
Really great educator. Thanks for this video.
Wow! This is fascinating! I have played the piano most of my life and have a strong emphasis on rhythms. I’ve figured these rhythms out when presented with them in a particular arrangement, but have never heard them explained this way. You’re a great teacher!
That mindblowing accent change happens in "I Can Talk" from Two Doors Cinema Club. Sometimes I hear "a O a a O", but the "right" way to hear is "A o A a o".
Meshuggah - Spasm.
Polyrhythm heaven. Thank me later.
You're a truly gifted teacher. Thank you.
Extremely helpful video! Thank you so much
Step 1, write a simple melody using 3:4 polyrythm
step 2, add some Spanish lyrics
step 3, Congratulations, you just wrote a new summer hit that every goddamn radio station will engrave into every ones minds
But have you listed to Djazzpacito?
The Reggaeton Rhythm is not a 3:4 polyrhythm. It’s in 4:4 and goes 1, + of 2, 3, 4; a dotted quarter note, then an eighth note, then a quarter note, and then another quarter note.
I love it when some arrogant twat tries to act all snobby and arrogant on CZcams and ends up being completely wrong. Delicious.
Also, the rhythm is called a "tresillo", and it's prevalent in many, many forms and styles of music all over Latin America. It's been around much, much longer than Despacito (which is an alright tune, and shut up).
@@MusicTheatreTheory did someone say Tequila? cos its a little early in the day.....but it wouldnt be the first time....
What is this “Radio” thing?
I CAN PRACTICALLY SMELL THE PROG.
Also, does 9:37 remind anyone of that byzantine math metal song that he did? Or am I just crazy?
This is absolutely incredible! I was having so much trouble with these rhythms for an assignment... thank you!!
I liked this channel before but now I'm officially in love. I finally got a good grasp of the topic. You are a wonderful teacher!
I love you man! Greetings from Chile
I can play it!!
On my lap 4 over 3
So cool!
Try it people.
Sense of accomplishment!
In fact, I stopped the video so I could get the swing of doing it. Eventually I noticed I was playing the drum, focusing on the hands individually. Really good concept
God bless you for real ! I've been looking for good content on this in exactly your manner of teaching. Im glad you weren't scared to make the video. I'm a professional musician, and have been going back to bare basics in my rhythms study. Perfect. thank you !
This is such an amazing video. I've always been playing around with 3:4 and have been stuck so many times. This video totally solved everything.
What you are de-mystifing is what African culture expresses instinctly! African music is polyrhythmic but, also poly meter! This is what JAZZ is all about! Playing syncopated polyrhythms on monophonic instruments!
thats how come the largest forced migration in human history resulted in the creation of the greatest musicS (plural) on the planet! A famous musician from my birthplace once said “all music comes from New Orleans!” I think he meant all popular music!
Well written. He is basically teaching soul. I feel like it’s more about the “feel” not some silly pass butter to left. It’s sounds like a gimmick to me, in the end I feel the musician should feel the music. People want everything written, talk to the music directly.
@@rootsdubz bravo!
@@rootsdubz I get your point, and think it's a valid one, but because we all grew up in slightly or very different cultures, there are certain things that tend to come less naturally to some of us then others (& I'm sure it's the same the other way around); everyone learned differently, and while, agreed, the sound should be "inate" or become inate in feeling when played, for a lot of young musicians in other parts of the world (maybe not just west, but possibly also east Asia, for example) it can definitely be a process/learning curve..😅
I guess a shorter way to put it is some of us need it explained differently, or even both ways, to being the learning and later/eventually the mastery process 😄
(But this is just my view, currently, on it)
@@truthsings7 Thank you, well put.
Shoutout to Kevin for that slick 7string chug monster
one day i'll play past the third fret on it!
Man, this is the best lesson on this in the existence of this world. Been clapping all day and FINALLY get it! Thanks for teaching a music noob that he can learn something I thought previously far too complex to comprehend.
My mind is blown! Thank you for this!
I don’t think I’ve heard a riff heavier than your example! Thanks for this! I’ll have to incorporate some polyrhythms into my own composing. Also how do you achieve such a crushing guitar tone?
6:37 I'M dead XD lmaoooooo he killt it outta no where
Your channel is great. It feels good when a teacher doesn't preface their video with a coupon code for a book. Thank you for being a good teacher. I'm learning a lot from your videos.
Excellent Lesson, Jake! Thanks!
This is amazing but I feel like middle eastern music has been implementing this as normal. They might hear our 4/4 and think we are the weird ones
Lars has left the chat room
Great teaching style. I learned something.
This is the third video of yours I have seen and quite frankly you are excellent at breaking down the complex into simple digestible bites and that is the mark of a good teacher. Keep it up as I just subscribed and hit the bell and am wanting more.
You sir..... are amazing 😭🤙🏼
13:00
Him: "That would get kinda nutty, let me give it a try."
*Plays it flawlessly*
Me: Wait so... parenthesis exponents and what?
On twitter you said you were going to walk with a 3:4 polyrhythm between your arms and legs. When is this going to come out?
LOL Yes I deicded to put that into my Polyrhythm Supplemental video- I will make a follow up to this on how polymeters create polyrhythms, and how polyrhythm occurs in your daily life. That will feature the PolyRhythm Walk and some other silly things. I wanted to keep this video as straightforward and practical as possible (except the 7 string part :P)
@@SignalsMusicStudio That makes sense. Walking polyrhythmically wouldn't really fit into a video about the practical applications of polyrhythms.
What's not practical about walking polyrhythmically?
@@maxonmendel5757 Many are blind to its true value.
@@SignalsMusicStudio At one stage in this video, my mind associated to the offset rhythm of the windshield wipers and sideways indicators. Which then made me think of the Captain Beefheart song 'Bat Chain Puller' which was apparently inspired by windshield wipers. :D
This is something that all percussion folk eventually encounter, at least for their own curiosity and entertainment. And flipping 3/4 and 4/3 and counting both is SUCH a sweet little concise service to us because one is intuitive and for whatever reason the other isn't, and like your said, that's where most people/lessons stop. So... passing the butter to the left, is one of those supremely simple solutions to a seemingly complex problem.. much appreciated.
really mind blowing as said ! thanks
Ok. Got it. No, wait.... I don't got it. Damn. Back to the start of the video...
Right??
2:13
“I want my baby back, baby back, baby back, baby back ribs.”
Great lesson man! Thanks for clearing up some of mud in mind regarding this. Looking forward to seeing more.
This is amazing. I didn't really have any interest in the subject matter, when I saw the title, but you have earned the right to be heard, so I thought that I should check out your video. It is so worth it. Thank you for your time!