i try to come in on the seventh count
one two three four five six seven BOOM
one two three four five six seven BOOM
myoung6923 wrote:I really think that the 3/4 then 4/4 should be kept in mind especially when getting to the bridge partThe Anthology sheet music shows it this way as well, broken down to 3/4 then 4/4 throughout.
That goes 3 beats on F - 4 beats on A - and so forth...
Billbbill wrote:myoung6923 wrote:I really think that the 3/4 then 4/4 should be kept in mind especially when getting to the bridge partThe Anthology sheet music shows it this way as well, broken down to 3/4 then 4/4 throughout.
That goes 3 beats on F - 4 beats on A - and so forth...
Question. I referred to this as 7/8 which would seem to me to be just putting the 3/4 and 4/4 together.
Pete B. says it's 7/4. Is this a different way to say the same thing or what? I be guessin yes.
Just curious.
AugustWest wrote:Got it - I think.Billbbill wrote:myoung6923 wrote:I really think that the 3/4 then 4/4 should be kept in mind especially when getting to the bridge partThe Anthology sheet music shows it this way as well, broken down to 3/4 then 4/4 throughout.
That goes 3 beats on F - 4 beats on A - and so forth...
Question. I referred to this as 7/8 which would seem to me to be just putting the 3/4 and 4/4 together.
Pete B. says it's 7/4. Is this a different way to say the same thing or what? I be guessin yes.
Just curious.
When you "put together" 3/4 and 4/4 on sheet music it would be in 7/4 and not 7/8 because the quarter note is still counted as 1 beat. 7/8 would take the eighth note as the beat and slow the song down considerably.
Tennessee Jedi wrote:TryBingo. With the 3,4 being the "California!" "You were alseep" parts.
1 - 2 - 3 - 4
1 - 2 - 3
then
1 - 2 - 3
1 - 2 - 3 - 4