14 Musical Works In The Most Unusual Time Signatures

In the 60’s and 70’s, a bunch of Jazz and Rock Musicians listened to serious classical music and they took some of those ideas and applied them to different forms. It did not necessarily require that the musicians involved actually read sheet music or study it in a classroom; they heard classical music on recordings and on radio broadcasts and they decided to use these ideas when writing their own original music.

Here you can listen some of the most famous examples of pieces with unusual rhythms:

1. Prelude no. 15 from ‘The Well-Tempered Clavier’ by Johann Sebastian Bach: 24/16

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2. Lilliputsche Chaconne (the so-called ‘Gulliver Suite’) by Georg Philipp Telemann: 3/32

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3. Variatio 26, a 2 Clav., from the ‘Goldberg Variations’ by Johann Sebastian Bach. (18/16 in one hand against 3/4 in the other, exchanging hands at intervals until the last five bars where both hands are in 18/16)

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4. Sketch, Op. 1 No. 10, by Alexei Stanchinsky: 2/16

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5. Six Dances in Bulgarian Rhythm – No. 2, from Béla Bartók’s Mikrokosmos: 7/8

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6. No. 41a from ‘Study for Player Piano’ by Conlon Nancarrow – Time Signature: 1/√π/√⅔

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7. Klavierstück IX by Karlheinz Stockhausen: 34/8, 42/8, 87/8, 142/8

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8. Blue Rondo à la Turk by the Dave Brubeck Quartet (Played as 2+2+2+3 and 3+3+3, with some alternating sections of 4/4)

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9. Here Comes the Sun, by The Beatles. The bridge can be transcribed as 11/8 + 4/4 + 7/8

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10. Keep It Greasy by Frank Zappa (On the studio album, first verse and guitar solo are counted in 19/16 and another part is in 21/16)

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11. The First Circle by the Pat Metheny Group: 12/8, 22/8

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12. The Terminator main theme, by Brad Fiedel: 13/8

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13. Mario Kart 64 (video game), music by Kenta Nagata, at the race results screen: 11/8

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14. Crystalline by Björk: partially in 17/8

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5 thoughts on “14 Musical Works In The Most Unusual Time Signatures”

  1. Dance of eternity by Dream Theater should be on here for sure. 108 time signature changes in 6 minutes.

  2. Listening to #6 (Study no 41a) it sounds as crazy as the time signature would suggest and I’m not entirely convinced it could be reproduced exactly as played by someone else, but there are incredible artists out there with incredible minds and incredible talent, so it might be possible.

  3. “14 Musical Works In The Most Unusual Time Signatures” — were those examples supposed to have audio links? I get only the graphics.

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