Hi All
I see that you can select the bars per phrase in preferances in TPro.I am still new in this what does this actually means and what will it do in the setup if I select 4 bars or 17 bars????
Whats the ideal for techno???
Hi All
I see that you can select the bars per phrase in preferances in TPro.I am still new in this what does this actually means and what will it do in the setup if I select 4 bars or 17 bars????
Whats the ideal for techno???
I think I seen this in Torq. I would say stick with 4, but I can't be too sure. sorry.
SyblingQ - Electro House for dark alleys.
Its to do with sync, so traktor can match the beat correctly.
If you set it up wrong traktor wont have the bars in sync, only the beats. 99% of techno has a 4/4 time signiture so leave it on 4
Last edited by BentoSan; 11-18-2008 at 03:12 PM.
Is there a way to have the beat count off be like it was in T3 where it would count total beats, not measures? I really liked that visual.
Korg Zero 4, Macbook Pro, Vci 100, Akai Mpd24,
Korg Emx1, Pioneer Hdj 1000, Guitar band guitar, 2x Tapco Th15 a, Traktor PRO
I think D&B is like 2/3 or something like that.
SyblingQ - Electro House for dark alleys.
Why is it that you have to loop in t3 at 12 instead of 16?
SyblingQ - Electro House for dark alleys.
the phrases can be 3 bars instead of 4 (insert music theory)
4/4 speaks to how many beats to a measure. 3 bar phrases will be 12 beats, but still in 4/4.
And Most DnB is in 4/4, at least that I've heard. Sometimes, though, the tempo will be mapped weird and it'll feel like 7/8 or something.
So let me get this straight (because I've always made up my own terminology in my head haha, never knew the proper terms):
4/4 = 4 beats per measure. Has nothing to do with beats or measures per phrase?
Therefore, 3/4 would be 3 beats/measure?
How would you describe a song that has 4 beats per measure (= 4/4), but only 3 measures (i.e. 12 beats) per phrase? An example would be "Club Soda" by Thomas Bangalter.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ABx4oqeYiIw
Thanks!
As a side note, my own terminology was always (assuming 4/4):
4 beats = one measure.
8 beats = one phrase.
32 beats = one verse (or four phrases).
I always thought of music like that, because with vocals, 8 beats would usually correspond to one line (or phrase, literally) in the lyrics.
EDIT:
Why would 4/4 refer to the number of beats per measure, when the numbers are FOUR and FOUR when it's FOUR beats for ONE measure?
I think it makes more sense for 4/4 to mean 4 beats/measure, AND 4 measures/phrase.
Really I should just Wiki this hahaha.
Last edited by miyuru; 11-18-2008 at 03:28 PM.
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