View Single Post
Old 20th-September-2006, 06:57 PM   #8 (permalink)
Caro
Senior Member
 
Caro's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: London
Posts: 2,484
Status: No Status
Rep Power: 3 Rep.: 1688
Caro is a name known to allCaro is a name known to allCaro is a name known to allCaro is a name known to allCaro is a name known to allCaro is a name known to allCaro is a name known to allCaro is a name known to allCaro is a name known to allCaro is a name known to allCaro is a name known to all
Re: WCS timing, swing timing

just found some stuff that might be useful although fairly technical
- just in case I wasn't the only one not to know the difference between 'swung' and 'straight'

In music, a swung note or shuffle note is the rhythmic device in which the duration of the initial note in a pair is augmented and that of the second is diminished. A swing or shuffle rhythm is the rhythm produced by playing repeated pairs of notes in this way. Lilting can refer to swinging, but might also indicate syncopation or other subtle ways of interpreting and shaping musical time.

In some jazz music, especially of the big band era, there is a convention that pairs of written eighth notes are not played equally--as the notation would otherwise be understood--but with the first longer than the second. The first note of each of these pairs is often understood to be twice as long as the second, implying a triplet feel, but in practice the difference is rarely that pronounced (see "amount of swing," below). This is an assumed convention of notation in many styles of jazz, but usually does not apply to jazz before the early 1930s, latin jazz, bebop, or to the work of composers writing in the 1950s or later, unless "swing" is specified in the score.

Notes that are not swung are known as straight notes.

Last edited by Caro; 20th-September-2006 at 07:08 PM.
Caro is offline   Reply With Quote