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Tuplet

In music, a tuplet (also irrational rhythm or groupings, artificial division or groupings, abnormal divisions, irregular rhythm, gruppetto, extra-metric groupings, or, rarely, contrametric rhythm) is "any rhythm that involves dividing the beat into a different number of equal subdivisions from that usually permitted by the time-signature (e.g., triplets, duplets, etc.)"[1] This is indicated by a number, or sometimes two indicating the fraction involved. The notes involved are also often grouped with a bracket or (in older notation) a slur.

Rhythm with tuplets: a triplet on the second beat and a quintuplet on the fourth

The most common type of tuplet is the triplet.

Terminology edit

The modern term 'tuplet' comes from a rebracketing of compound words like quintu(s)-(u)plet and sextu(s)-(u)plet, and from related mathematical terms such as "tuple", "-uplet" and "-plet", which are used to form terms denoting multiplets (Oxford English Dictionary, entries "multiplet", "-plet, comb. form", "-let, suffix", and "-et, suffix1"). An alternative modern term, "irrational rhythm", was originally borrowed from Greek prosody where it referred to "a syllable having a metrical value not corresponding to its actual time-value, or ... a metrical foot containing such a syllable" (Oxford English Dictionary, entry "irrational"). The term would be incorrect if used in the mathematical sense (because the note-values are rational fractions) or in the more general sense of "unreasonable, utterly illogical, absurd".

Alternative terms found occasionally are "artificial division",[2] "abnormal divisions",[3] "irregular rhythm",[4] and "irregular rhythmic groupings".[5] The term "polyrhythm" (or "polymeter"), sometimes incorrectly used instead of "tuplets", actually refers to the simultaneous use of opposing time signatures.[6]

Besides "triplet", the terms "duplet", "quadruplet", "quintuplet", "sextuplet", "septuplet", and "octuplet" are used frequently. The terms "nonuplet", "decuplet", "undecuplet", "dodecuplet", and "tredecuplet" had been suggested but up until 1925 had not caught on.[7] By 1964 the terms "nonuplet" and "decuplet" were usual, while subdivisions by greater numbers were more commonly described as "group of eleven notes", "group of twelve notes", and so on.[8]

Triplet edit

The most common tuplet[9] is the triplet (German Triole, French triolet, Italian terzina or tripletta, Spanish tresillo). Whereas normally two quarter notes (crotchets) are the same duration as a half note (minim), three triplet quarter notes have that same duration, so the duration of a triplet quarter note is 23 the duration of a standard quarter note.

 

Similarly, three triplet eighth notes (quavers) are equal in duration to one quarter note. If several note values appear under the triplet bracket, they are all affected the same way, reduced to 23 their original duration.

 

The triplet indication may also apply to notes of different values, for example a quarter note followed by one eighth note, in which case the quarter note may be regarded as two triplet eighths tied together.[10]

 

In some older scores, rhythms like this would be notated as a dotted eighth note and a sixteenth note as a kind of shorthand[11] presumably so that the beaming more clearly shows the beats.

Tuplet notation edit

Notation edit

Tuplets are typically notated either with a bracket or with a number above or below the beam if the notes are beamed together. Sometimes, the tuplet is notated with a ratio (instead of just a number) — with the first number in the ratio indicating the number of notes in the tuplet and the second number indicating the number of normal notes they have the same duration as — or with a ratio and a note value.

 

Rhythm edit

Simple meter edit

For other tuplets, the number indicates a ratio to the next lower normal value in the prevailing meter (a power of 2 in simple meter). So a quintuplet (quintolet or pentuplet[12]) indicated with the numeral 5 means that five of the indicated note value total the duration normally occupied by four (or, as a division of a dotted note in compound time, three), equivalent to the second higher note value. For example, five quintuplet eighth notes total the same duration as a half note (or, in 3
8
or compound meters such as 6
8
, 9
8
, etc. time, a dotted quarter note).

 

Some numbers are used inconsistently: for example septuplets (septolets or septimoles) usually indicate 7 notes in the duration of 4—or in compound meter 7 for 6—but may sometimes be used to mean 7 notes in the duration of 8.[13] Thus, a septuplet lasting a whole note can be written with either quarter notes (7:4) or eighth notes (7:8).

 

To avoid ambiguity, composers sometimes write the ratio explicitly instead of just a single number. This is also done for cases like 7:11, where the validity of this practice is established by the complexity of the figure. A French alternative is to write pour ("for") or de ("of") in place of the colon, or above the bracketed "irregular" number.[14] This reflects the French usage of, for example, "six-pour-quatre" as an alternative name for the sextolet.[15][16]

There are disagreements about the sextuplet (pronounced with stress on the first syllable, according to Baker[17]—which is also called sestole, sestolet, sextole, or sextolet.[17][18][19][20][21][22][23] This six-part division may be regarded either as a triplet with each note divided in half (2 + 2 + 2)—therefore with an accent on the first, third, and fifth notes—or else as an ordinary duple pattern with each note subdivided into triplets (3 + 3) and accented on both the first and fourth notes. This is indicated by the beaming in the example below.

 

Some authorities treat both groupings as equally valid forms,[24][25][19][26][27] while others dispute this, holding the first type to be the "true" (or "real") sextuplet, and the second type to be properly a "double triplet", which should always be written and named as such.[28][29][30] Some go so far as to call the latter, when written with a numeral 6, a "false" sextuplet.[17][31][32] Still others, on the contrary, define the sextuplet precisely and solely as the double triplet,[21][33] and a few more, while accepting the distinction, contend that the true sextuplet has no internal subdivisions—only the first note of the group should be accented.[34][30][23])

Compound meter edit

In compound meter, even-numbered tuplets can indicate that a note value is changed in relation to the dotted version of the next higher note value. Thus, two duplet eighth notes (most often used in 6
8
meter) take the time normally totaled by three eighth notes, equal to a dotted quarter note. Four quadruplet (or quartole) eighth notes would also equal a dotted quarter note. The duplet eighth note is thus exactly the same duration as a dotted eighth note, but the duplet notation is far more common in compound meters.[35]

 

A duplet in compound time is more often written as 2:3 (a dotted quarter note split into two duplet eighth notes) than 2:1+12 (a dotted quarter note split into two duplet quarter notes), even though the former is inconsistent with a quadruplet also being written as 4:3 (a dotted quarter note split into four quadruplet eighth notes).[36]

Nested tuplets edit

On occasion, tuplets are used "inside" tuplets. These are referred to as nested tuplets.

 

Counting edit

Tuplets can produce rhythms such as the hemiola or may be used as polyrhythms when played against the regular duration. They are extrametric rhythmic units. The example below shows sextuplets in quintuplet time.

 

Tuplets may be counted, most often at extremely slow tempos, using the least common multiple (LCM) between the original and tuplet divisions. For example, with a 3-against-2 tuplet (triplets) the LCM is 6. Since 6 ÷ 2 = 3 and 6 ÷ 3 = 2 the quarter notes fall every three counts (overlined) and the triplets every two (underlined):

1 2 3 4 5 6

This is fairly easily brought up to tempo, and depending on the music may be counted in tempo, while 7-against-4, having an LCM of 28, may be counted at extremely slow tempos but must be played intuitively ("felt out") at tempo:

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28

To play a half-note (minim) triplet accurately in a bar of 4
4
, count eighth-note triplets and tie them together in groups of four

 

With a stress on each target note, one would count: 1 – 2 – 3  1 – 2 – 3  1 – 2 – 3  1 – 2 – 3  1 The same principle can be applied to quintuplets, septuplets, and so on.

See also edit

References edit

Sources

  • Anon. 1997–2000. "Music Notation Questions Answered". Graphire Corporation, Graphire.com (Accessed 10 May 2013).
  • Baker, Theodore (ed.). 1895. A Dictionary of Musical Terms. New York: G. Schirmer.
  • Cooper, Paul. 1973. Perspectives in Music Theory: An Historical-Analytical Approach. New York: Dodd, Mead. ISBN 0-396-06752-2.
  • Cunningham, Michael G. 2007. Technique for Composers. Bloomington, Indiana: AuthorHouse. ISBN 1-4259-9618-3.
  • Damour, Antoine, Aimable Burnett, and Élie Elwart. 1838. Études élémentaires de la musique: depuis ses premières notions jusqu'à celles de la composition: divisées en trois parties: Connaissances préliminaires. Méthode de chant. Méthode d’harmonie. Paris: Bureau des Études élémentaires de la musique.
  • Donato, Anthony. 1963. Preparing Music Manuscript. Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall. Unaltered reprint, Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 1977 ISBN 0-8371-9587-X.
  • Dunstan, Ralph. 1925. A Cyclopædic Dictionary of Music. 4th ed. London: J. Curwen & Sons, 1925. Reprint. New York: DaCapo Press, 1973.
  • Gehrkens, Karl W. 1921. Music Notation and Terminology. New York and Chicago: A. S. Barnes.
  • Hubbard, William Lines. 1924. Musical Dictionary, revised and enlarged edition. Toledo: Squire Cooley. Reprinted as The American History and Encyclopedia of Music. Whitefish, Montana: Kessinger Publishing, 2005. ISBN 1-4179-0200-0.
  • Humphries, Carl. 2002. The Piano Handbook. San Francisco: Backbeat Books; London: Hi Marketing. ISBN 0-87930-727-7.
  • Jones, George Thaddeus. 1974. Music Theory: The Fundamental Concepts of Tonal Music Including Notation, Terminology, and Harmony. New York, Hagerstown, San Francisco, London: Barnes & Noble Books. ISBN 0-06-460137-4.
  • Kastner, Jean-Georges. 1838. Tableaux analytiques et résumé général des principes élémentaires de musique. Paris.
  • Lobe, Johann Christian. 1881. Catechism of Music, new and improved edition, edited and revised from the 20th German edition by John Henry Cornell, translated by Fanny Raymond Ritter. New York: G. Schirmer. (First edition of English translation by Fanny Raymond Ritter. New York: J. Schuberth 1867.)
  • Kennedy, Michael. 1994. "Irregular Rhythmic Groupings. (Duplets, Triplets, Quadruplets)". Oxford Dictionary of Music, second edition, associate editor, Joyce Bourne. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-869162-9.
  • Köhler, Louis. 1858. Systematische Lehrmethode für Clavierspiel und Musik: Theoretisch und praktisch, 2 vols. Leipzig: Breitkopf und Härtel.
  • Latham, Alison (ed.). 2002. "Sextuplet [sextolet]". The Oxford Companion to Music. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-866212-2.
  • Marx, Adolf Bernhard. 1853. Universal School of Music, translated from the fifth edition of the original German by August Heinrich Wehrhan. London.
  • Peckman, Jon. 2007. Picture Yourself Drumming: Step-by-Step Instruction for Drum Kit Setup, Reading Music, Learning from the Pros, and More. Boston, Massachusetts: Thomson Course Technology. ISBN 1-59863-330-9.
  • Read, Gardner. 1964. Music Notation: A Manual of Modern Practice. Boston: Alleyn and Bacon. Second edition, Boston: Alleyn and Bacon, 1969., reprinted as A Crescendo Book, New York: Taplinger, 1979. ISBN 0-8008-5459-4 (cloth), ISBN 0-8008-5453-5 (pbk).
  • Riemann, Hugo. 1884. Musikalische Dynamik und Agogik: Lehrbuch der musikalischen Phrasirung auf Grund einer Revision der Lehre von der musikalischen Metrik und Rhythmik. Hamburg: D. Rahter; Saint Petersburg: A. Büttner; Leipzig: Fr. Kistnet.
  • Schonbrun, Marc. 2007. The Everything Music Theory Book: A Complete Guide to Taking Your Understanding of Music to the Next Level. The Everything Series. Avon, Massachusetts: Adams Media. ISBN 1-59337-652-9.
  • Sembos, Evangelos C. 2006. Principles of Music Theory: A Practical Guide, second edition. Morrisville, North Carolina: Lulu Press. ISBN 1-4303-0955-5.
  • Shedlock, Emma L. 1876. A Trip to Music-Land: An Allegorical and Pictorial Exposition of the Elements of Music. London, Glasgow, and Edinburgh: Blackie & Son.
  • Stainer, John, and William Alexander Barrett. 1876. A Dictionary of Musical Terms. London: Novello, Ewer and Co.
  • Taylor, Franklin. 1879–1889. "Sextolet". A Dictionary of Music and Musicians (A.D. 1450–1883) by Eminent Writers, English and Foreign, 4 vols, edited by Sir George Grove, 3:478. London: Macmillan and Co.
  • Taylor, Franklin. 2001. "Sextolet, Sextuplet." The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell. London: Macmillan.
  • Troeger, Richard (2003). Playing Bach on the Keyboard: A Practical Guide. Pompton Plains, New Jersey: Amadeus Press. p. 172. ISBN 1574670840. OCLC 52424125.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  •   Media related to Tuplet at Wikimedia Commons

tuplet, this, article, about, musical, term, mathematical, concept, tuple, music, tuplet, also, irrational, rhythm, groupings, artificial, division, groupings, abnormal, divisions, irregular, rhythm, gruppetto, extra, metric, groupings, rarely, contrametric, r. This article is about the musical term For mathematical concept see Tuple In music a tuplet also irrational rhythm or groupings artificial division or groupings abnormal divisions irregular rhythm gruppetto extra metric groupings or rarely contrametric rhythm is any rhythm that involves dividing the beat into a different number of equal subdivisions from that usually permitted by the time signature e g triplets duplets etc 1 This is indicated by a number or sometimes two indicating the fraction involved The notes involved are also often grouped with a bracket or in older notation a slur source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Rhythm with tuplets a triplet on the second beat and a quintuplet on the fourth The most common type of tuplet is the triplet Contents 1 Terminology 2 Triplet 3 Tuplet notation 3 1 Notation 3 2 Rhythm 3 2 1 Simple meter 3 2 2 Compound meter 3 3 Nested tuplets 4 Counting 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksTerminology editThe modern term tuplet comes from a rebracketing of compound words like quintu s u plet and sextu s u plet and from related mathematical terms such as tuple uplet and plet which are used to form terms denoting multiplets Oxford English Dictionary entries multiplet plet comb form let suffix and et suffix1 An alternative modern term irrational rhythm was originally borrowed from Greek prosody where it referred to a syllable having a metrical value not corresponding to its actual time value or a metrical foot containing such a syllable Oxford English Dictionary entry irrational The term would be incorrect if used in the mathematical sense because the note values are rational fractions or in the more general sense of unreasonable utterly illogical absurd Alternative terms found occasionally are artificial division 2 abnormal divisions 3 irregular rhythm 4 and irregular rhythmic groupings 5 The term polyrhythm or polymeter sometimes incorrectly used instead of tuplets actually refers to the simultaneous use of opposing time signatures 6 Besides triplet the terms duplet quadruplet quintuplet sextuplet septuplet and octuplet are used frequently The terms nonuplet decuplet undecuplet dodecuplet and tredecuplet had been suggested but up until 1925 had not caught on 7 By 1964 the terms nonuplet and decuplet were usual while subdivisions by greater numbers were more commonly described as group of eleven notes group of twelve notes and so on 8 Triplet editThe most common tuplet 9 is the triplet German Triole French triolet Italian terzina or tripletta Spanish tresillo Whereas normally two quarter notes crotchets are the same duration as a half note minim three triplet quarter notes have that same duration so the duration of a triplet quarter note is 2 3 the duration of a standard quarter note nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Similarly three triplet eighth notes quavers are equal in duration to one quarter note If several note values appear under the triplet bracket they are all affected the same way reduced to 2 3 their original duration nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file The triplet indication may also apply to notes of different values for example a quarter note followed by one eighth note in which case the quarter note may be regarded as two triplet eighths tied together 10 nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file In some older scores rhythms like this would be notated as a dotted eighth note and a sixteenth note as a kind of shorthand 11 presumably so that the beaming more clearly shows the beats Tuplet notation editNotation edit Tuplets are typically notated either with a bracket or with a number above or below the beam if the notes are beamed together Sometimes the tuplet is notated with a ratio instead of just a number with the first number in the ratio indicating the number of notes in the tuplet and the second number indicating the number of normal notes they have the same duration as or with a ratio and a note value nbsp Rhythm edit Simple meter edit For other tuplets the number indicates a ratio to the next lower normal value in the prevailing meter a power of 2 in simple meter So a quintuplet quintolet or pentuplet 12 indicated with the numeral 5 means that five of the indicated note value total the duration normally occupied by four or as a division of a dotted note in compound time three equivalent to the second higher note value For example five quintuplet eighth notes total the same duration as a half note or in 38 or compound meters such as 68 98 etc time a dotted quarter note nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Some numbers are used inconsistently for example septuplets septolets or septimoles usually indicate 7 notes in the duration of 4 or in compound meter 7 for 6 but may sometimes be used to mean 7 notes in the duration of 8 13 Thus a septuplet lasting a whole note can be written with either quarter notes 7 4 or eighth notes 7 8 nbsp To avoid ambiguity composers sometimes write the ratio explicitly instead of just a single number This is also done for cases like 7 11 where the validity of this practice is established by the complexity of the figure A French alternative is to write pour for or de of in place of the colon or above the bracketed irregular number 14 This reflects the French usage of for example six pour quatre as an alternative name for the sextolet 15 16 There are disagreements about the sextuplet pronounced with stress on the first syllable according to Baker 17 which is also called sestole sestolet sextole or sextolet 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 This six part division may be regarded either as a triplet with each note divided in half 2 2 2 therefore with an accent on the first third and fifth notes or else as an ordinary duple pattern with each note subdivided into triplets 3 3 and accented on both the first and fourth notes This is indicated by the beaming in the example below nbsp Some authorities treat both groupings as equally valid forms 24 25 19 26 27 while others dispute this holding the first type to be the true or real sextuplet and the second type to be properly a double triplet which should always be written and named as such 28 29 30 Some go so far as to call the latter when written with a numeral 6 a false sextuplet 17 31 32 Still others on the contrary define the sextuplet precisely and solely as the double triplet 21 33 and a few more while accepting the distinction contend that the true sextuplet has no internal subdivisions only the first note of the group should be accented 34 30 23 Compound meter edit In compound meter even numbered tuplets can indicate that a note value is changed in relation to the dotted version of the next higher note value Thus two duplet eighth notes most often used in 68 meter take the time normally totaled by three eighth notes equal to a dotted quarter note Four quadruplet or quartole eighth notes would also equal a dotted quarter note The duplet eighth note is thus exactly the same duration as a dotted eighth note but the duplet notation is far more common in compound meters 35 nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file A duplet in compound time is more often written as 2 3 a dotted quarter note split into two duplet eighth notes than 2 1 1 2 a dotted quarter note split into two duplet quarter notes even though the former is inconsistent with a quadruplet also being written as 4 3 a dotted quarter note split into four quadruplet eighth notes 36 Nested tuplets edit On occasion tuplets are used inside tuplets These are referred to as nested tuplets nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Counting editTuplets can produce rhythms such as the hemiola or may be used as polyrhythms when played against the regular duration They are extrametric rhythmic units The example below shows sextuplets in quintuplet time nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Tuplets may be counted most often at extremely slow tempos using the least common multiple LCM between the original and tuplet divisions For example with a 3 against 2 tuplet triplets the LCM is 6 Since 6 2 3 and 6 3 2 the quarter notes fall every three counts overlined and the triplets every two underlined 1 2 3 4 5 6This is fairly easily brought up to tempo and depending on the music may be counted in tempo while 7 against 4 having an LCM of 28 may be counted at extremely slow tempos but must be played intuitively felt out at tempo 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28To play a half note minim triplet accurately in a bar of 44 count eighth note triplets and tie them together in groups of four nbsp With a stress on each target note one would count 1 2 3 1 2 3 1 2 3 1 2 3 1 The same principle can be applied to quintuplets septuplets and so on See also edit nbsp Look up tuplet in Wiktionary the free dictionary Composite rhythm Cross beat Duple and quadruple metre Metre hymn Metre poetry Metric modulation List of musical works in unusual time signatures Schaffel Sextuple metre Triple metreReferences edit Humphries 2002 266 Jones 1974 19 Donato 1963 34 Read 1964 181 Kennedy 1994 Read 1964 167 Dunstan 1925 p page needed Read 1964 189 Schonbrun 2007 8 Gehrkens 1921 19 Troeger 2003 172 Cunningham 2007 111 Read 1964 183 184 Read 1964 219 221 Damour Burnett and Elwart 1838 79 Hubbard 1924 480 a b c Baker 1895 177 Cooper 1973 32 a b Latham 2002 Shedlock 1876 62 68 87 93 a b Stainer and Barrett 1876 395 Taylor 1879 1889 a b Taylor 2001 Damour Burnett and Elwart 1838 80 Kohler 1858 2 52 53 Marx 1853 114 Read 1964 215 Kastner 1838 94 Riemann 1884 134 135 a b Taylor 1879 1889 3 478 Lobe 1881 36 Shedlock 1876 62 Sembos 2006 86 Riemann 1884 134 Jones 1974 20 Anon 1997 2000 Sources Anon 1997 2000 Music Notation Questions Answered Graphire Corporation Graphire com Accessed 10 May 2013 Baker Theodore ed 1895 A Dictionary of Musical Terms New York G Schirmer Cooper Paul 1973 Perspectives in Music Theory An Historical Analytical Approach New York Dodd Mead ISBN 0 396 06752 2 Cunningham Michael G 2007 Technique for Composers Bloomington Indiana AuthorHouse ISBN 1 4259 9618 3 Damour Antoine Aimable Burnett and Elie Elwart 1838 Etudes elementaires de la musique depuis ses premieres notions jusqu a celles de la composition divisees en trois parties Connaissances preliminaires Methode de chant Methode d harmonie Paris Bureau des Etudes elementaires de la musique Donato Anthony 1963 Preparing Music Manuscript Englewood Cliffs New Jersey Prentice Hall Unaltered reprint Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press 1977 ISBN 0 8371 9587 X Dunstan Ralph 1925 A Cyclopaedic Dictionary of Music 4th ed London J Curwen amp Sons 1925 Reprint New York DaCapo Press 1973 Gehrkens Karl W 1921 Music Notation and Terminology New York and Chicago A S Barnes Hubbard William Lines 1924 Musical Dictionary revised and enlarged edition Toledo Squire Cooley Reprinted as The American History and Encyclopedia of Music Whitefish Montana Kessinger Publishing 2005 ISBN 1 4179 0200 0 Humphries Carl 2002 The Piano Handbook San Francisco Backbeat Books London Hi Marketing ISBN 0 87930 727 7 Jones George Thaddeus 1974 Music Theory The Fundamental Concepts of Tonal Music Including Notation Terminology and Harmony New York Hagerstown San Francisco London Barnes amp Noble Books ISBN 0 06 460137 4 Kastner Jean Georges 1838 Tableaux analytiques et resume general des principes elementaires de musique Paris Lobe Johann Christian 1881 Catechism of Music new and improved edition edited and revised from the 20th German edition by John Henry Cornell translated by Fanny Raymond Ritter New York G Schirmer First edition of English translation by Fanny Raymond Ritter New York J Schuberth 1867 Kennedy Michael 1994 Irregular Rhythmic Groupings Duplets Triplets Quadruplets Oxford Dictionary of Music second edition associate editor Joyce Bourne Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 869162 9 Kohler Louis 1858 Systematische Lehrmethode fur Clavierspiel und Musik Theoretisch und praktisch 2 vols Leipzig Breitkopf und Hartel Latham Alison ed 2002 Sextuplet sextolet The Oxford Companion to Music Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 866212 2 Marx Adolf Bernhard 1853 Universal School of Music translated from the fifth edition of the original German by August Heinrich Wehrhan London Peckman Jon 2007 Picture Yourself Drumming Step by Step Instruction for Drum Kit Setup Reading Music Learning from the Pros and More Boston Massachusetts Thomson Course Technology ISBN 1 59863 330 9 Read Gardner 1964 Music Notation A Manual of Modern Practice Boston Alleyn and Bacon Second edition Boston Alleyn and Bacon 1969 reprinted as A Crescendo Book New York Taplinger 1979 ISBN 0 8008 5459 4 cloth ISBN 0 8008 5453 5 pbk Riemann Hugo 1884 Musikalische Dynamik und Agogik Lehrbuch der musikalischen Phrasirung auf Grund einer Revision der Lehre von der musikalischen Metrik und Rhythmik Hamburg D Rahter Saint Petersburg A Buttner Leipzig Fr Kistnet Schonbrun Marc 2007 The Everything Music Theory Book A Complete Guide to Taking Your Understanding of Music to the Next Level The Everything Series Avon Massachusetts Adams Media ISBN 1 59337 652 9 Sembos Evangelos C 2006 Principles of Music Theory A Practical Guide second edition Morrisville North Carolina Lulu Press ISBN 1 4303 0955 5 Shedlock Emma L 1876 A Trip to Music Land An Allegorical and Pictorial Exposition of the Elements of Music London Glasgow and Edinburgh Blackie amp Son Stainer John and William Alexander Barrett 1876 A Dictionary of Musical Terms London Novello Ewer and Co Taylor Franklin 1879 1889 Sextolet A Dictionary of Music and Musicians A D 1450 1883 by Eminent Writers English and Foreign 4 vols edited by Sir George Grove 3 478 London Macmillan and Co Taylor Franklin 2001 Sextolet Sextuplet The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians second edition edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell London Macmillan Troeger Richard 2003 Playing Bach on the Keyboard A Practical Guide Pompton Plains New Jersey Amadeus Press p 172 ISBN 1574670840 OCLC 52424125 Further reading editBaker Theodore Nicolas Slonimsky and Laura Dine Kuhn 1995 Schirmer Pronouncing Pocket Manual of Musical Terms New York Schirmer Books ISBN 0 8256 7223 6 External links edit nbsp Media related to Tuplet at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tuplet amp oldid 1210818399, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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