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- Triple_metre abstract "Triple metre (or triple meter, also known as triple time) is a musical metre characterized by a primary division of 3 beats to the bar, usually indicated by 3 (simple) or 9 (compound) in the upper figure of the time signature, with 3/4, 3/2, and 3/8 being the most common examples. The upper figure being divisible by three does not of itself indicate triple metre; for example, a time signature of 6/8 usually indicates compound duple metre, and similarly 12/8 usually indicates compound quadruple.It is reasonably common in ballads and classical music but much less so in traditions such as rock & roll and jazz. The most common time in rock, blues, country, funk, and pop is quadruple. Although jazz writing has become more adventurous since Dave Brubeck's seminal Time Out,[citation needed] the majority of jazz and jazz standards are still in straight quadruple time[citation needed].Triple time is common in formal dance styles, for example the waltz, the minuet and the mazurka. Movements in triple time characterized the more adventurous approach of 17th and 18th Century music, for example the Sarabande, which originated in Latin America and appeared in Spain early in the 16th Century, became a standard movement in the suite during the baroque period. The baroque sarabande is commonly a slow triple rather than the much faster Spanish original, consistent with the courtly European interpretations of many Latin dances. The sarabande form was revived in the 20th Century by composers such as Debussy, Satie and, in a different style, Vaughan Williams (in Job) and Benjamin Britten (in Simple Symphony)Tunes in triple metre tend to be more lyrical and less martial than those in duple meter[citation needed]. Consequently, for example, triple meter is rare in national anthems[citation needed] -- the national anthems of the United Kingdom and United States being two notable exceptions.In Mozart's Requiem triple time is used in the Recordare, Hostias and Agnus Dei as a contrast to the more robust two- and four-in-a-bar of the rest of the work, giving these movements a more reflective feel.".
- Triple_metre thumbnail Compound_triple_drum_pattern.png?width=300.
- Triple_metre wikiPageID "3052801".
- Triple_metre wikiPageRevisionID "596239180".
- Triple_metre hasPhotoCollection Triple_metre.
- Triple_metre subject Category:Rhythm_and_meter.
- Triple_metre type Abstraction100002137.
- Triple_metre type DefiniteQuantity113576101.
- Triple_metre type LinearUnit113603305.
- Triple_metre type Measure100033615.
- Triple_metre type Meter113659162.
- Triple_metre type Metres.
- Triple_metre type MetricLinearUnit113649268.
- Triple_metre type MetricUnit113604275.
- Triple_metre type UnitOfMeasurement113583724.
- Triple_metre comment "Triple metre (or triple meter, also known as triple time) is a musical metre characterized by a primary division of 3 beats to the bar, usually indicated by 3 (simple) or 9 (compound) in the upper figure of the time signature, with 3/4, 3/2, and 3/8 being the most common examples.".
- Triple_metre label "Compasso ternário".
- Triple_metre label "Triple metre".
- Triple_metre sameAs Compasso_ternário.
- Triple_metre sameAs m.08nbq_.
- Triple_metre sameAs Q7843523.
- Triple_metre sameAs Q7843523.
- Triple_metre sameAs Triple_metre.
- Triple_metre wasDerivedFrom Triple_metre?oldid=596239180.
- Triple_metre depiction Compound_triple_drum_pattern.png.
- Triple_metre isPrimaryTopicOf Triple_metre.