Syncopation

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Template:Short description Template:For Template:Use dmy dates Template:Image frame Template:Image frame In music, syncopation is a variety of rhythms played together to make a piece of music, making part or all of a tune or piece of music off-beat. More simply, syncopation is "a disturbance or interruption of the regular flow of rhythm": a "placement of rhythmic stresses or accents where they wouldn't normally occur".<ref name="Hoffman">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It is the correlation of at least two sets of time intervals.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Syncopation is used in many musical styles,Template:Citation needed such as electronic dance music. According to music producer Rick Snoman, “All dance music makes use of syncopation, and it’s often a vital element that helps tie the whole track together”.<ref name="Dance">Template:Cite book</ref>

Syncopation can also occur when a strong harmony is simultaneous with a weak beat, for instance, when a 7th-chord is played on the second beat of a Template:Music measure or a dominant chord is played at the fourth beat of a Template:Music measure. The latter occurs frequently in tonal cadences for 18th- and early-19th-century music and is the usual conclusion of any section.

A hemiola (the equivalent Latin term is sesquialtera) can also be considered as one straight measure in three with one long chord and one short chord and a syncope in the measure thereafter, with one short chord and one long chord. Usually, the last chord in a hemiola is a (bi-)dominant, and as such a strong harmony on a weak beat, hence a syncope.

Types of syncopationEdit

Technically, "syncopation occurs when a temporary displacement of the regular metrical accent occurs, causing the emphasis to shift from a strong accent to a weak accent".<ref>Template:Cite book.</ref> "Syncopation is very simply, a deliberate disruption of the two- or three-beat stress pattern, most often by stressing an off-beat, or a note that is not on the beat."<ref name="Dummies">Template:Cite book.</ref>

SuspensionEdit

For the following example, there are two points of syncopation where the third beats are sustained from the second beats. In the same way, the first beat of the second bar is sustained from the fourth beat of the first bar.

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Though syncopation may be very complex, dense or complex-looking rhythms often contain no syncopation. The following rhythm, though dense, stresses the regular downbeats, 1 and 4 (in Template:Music):<ref name="Dummies" />

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However, whether it is a placed rest or an accented note, any point in a piece of music that changes the listener's sense of the downbeat is a point of syncopation because it shifts where the strong and weak accents are built.<ref name="Dummies" />

Off-beat syncopationEdit

The stress can shift by less than a whole beat, so it occurs on an offbeat, as in the following example, where the stress in the first bar is shifted back by an eighth note (or quaver):

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Note how in the sound bite, the piano's notes do not happen at the same time as the drum beat that simply keeps a regular rhythm. In contrast, a standard-rhythm piece would have the notes occur on the beat:

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Playing a note ever so slightly before, or after, a beat is another form of syncopation because this produces an unexpected accent:

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It can be helpful to think of a Template:Music rhythm in eighth notes and count it as "1-and-2-and-3-and-4-and". In general, emphasizing the "and" would be considered the off-beat (syncopated), whereas having the emphasis on the numbers is on-beat.

Anticipated bassEdit

Anticipated bass<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> is a bass tone that comes syncopated shortly before the downbeat, which is used in Son montuno Cuban dance music. Timing can vary, but it usually occurs on the 2+ and the 4 of the Template:Music time, thus anticipating the third and first beats. This pattern is known commonly as the Afro-Cuban bass tumbao.

TransformationEdit

Richard Middleton<ref name="Middleton">Template:Cite book.</ref> suggests adding the concept of transformation to Narmour's<ref>Template:Cite book Cited in Template:Harvnb</ref> prosodic rules which create rhythmic successions in order to explain or generate syncopations. "The syncopated pattern is heard 'with reference to', 'in light of', as a remapping of, its partner." He gives examples of various types of syncopation: Latin, backbeat, and before-the-beat. First however, one may listen to the audio example of stress on the "strong" beats, where expected: {{#if:Unsyncopated example.mid|{{#ifexist:Media:Unsyncopated example.mid|<phonos file="Unsyncopated example.mid">Play</phonos>|{{errorTemplate:Main other|Audio file "Unsyncopated example.mid" not found}}Template:Category handler}}}}

Latin equivalent of simple Template:MusicEdit

In the example below, for the first two measures an unsyncopated rhythm is shown in the first measure. The third measure has a syncopated rhythm in which the first and fourth beat are provided as expected, but the accent occurs unexpectedly in between the second and third beats, creating a familiar "Latin rhythm" known as tresillo.

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Backbeat transformation of simple Template:MusicEdit

The accent may be shifted from the first to the second beat in duple meter (and the third to fourth in quadruple), creating the backbeat rhythm:

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Different crowds will "clap along" at concerts either on 1 and 3 or on 2 and 4, as above.

"Satisfaction" exampleEdit

The phrasing of the Rolling Stones' song "Satisfaction" is a good example of syncopation.<ref name="Dummies"/> It is derived here from its theoretic unsyncopated form, a repeated trochee (¯ ˘ ¯ ˘). A backbeat transformation is applied to "I" and "can't", and then a before-the-beat transformation is applied to "can't" and "no".<ref name="Middleton"/>

                  1  &  2  &  3  &  4  &  1  &  2  &  3  &  4  &
Repeated trochee: ¯           ˘           ¯           ˘
                  I           can't       get         no –  o
Backbeat trans.:        ¯           ˘     ¯           ˘
                        I           can't get         no –  o
Before-the-beat:        ¯        ˘        ¯        ˘
                        I        can't    get      no –  o

{{#if:Satisfaction transformations.mid|{{#ifexist:Media:Satisfaction transformations.mid|<phonos file="Satisfaction transformations.mid">Play</phonos>|{{errorTemplate:Main other|Audio file "Satisfaction transformations.mid" not found}}Template:Category handler}}}}

This demonstrates how each syncopated pattern may be heard as a remapping, "with reference to" or "in light of", an unsyncopated pattern.<ref name="Middleton"/>

HistoryEdit

Syncopation has been an important element of European musical composition since at least the Middle Ages. Many Italian and French compositions of the music of the 14th-century Trecento use syncopation, as in of the following madrigal by Giovanni da Firenze. (See also hocket.)

File:Giovanni da Firenze, Appress' un fiume.png
Giovanni da Firenze, Appress' un fiume. Listen

The refrain "Deo Gratias" from the 15th-century anonymous English "Agincourt Carol" is also characterised by lively syncopation:

File:Agincourt carol - Deo gracias 01.wav
Agincourt carol – Deo gratias
File:Agincourt carol - Deo gracias.png
Agincourt carol – Deo gratias

According to the Encyclopædia Britannica, "[t]he 15th-century carol repertory is one of the most substantial monuments of English medieval music... The early carols are rhythmically straightforward, in modern Template:Music time; later the basic rhythm is in Template:Music, with many cross-rhythms... as in the famous Agincourt carol 'Deo gratias Anglia'. As in other music of the period, the emphasis is not on harmony, but on melody and rhythm."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Composers of the musical High Renaissance Venetian School, such as Giovanni Gabrieli (1557–1612), exploited syncopation for both their secular madrigals and instrumental pieces and also in their choral sacred works, such as the motet Domine, Dominus noster:

File:Gabrieli Domine Dominus noster.wav
Gabrieli Domine Dominus noster

Denis Arnold says: "the syncopations of this passage are of a kind which is almost a Gabrieli fingerprint, and they are typical of a general liveliness of rhythm common to Venetian music".<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The composer Igor Stravinsky, no stranger to syncopation himself, spoke of "those marvellous rhythmic inventions" that feature in Gabrieli's music.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

J. S. Bach and George Handel used syncopated rhythms as an inherent part of their compositions. One of the best-known examples of syncopation in music from the Baroque era was the "Hornpipe" from Handel's Water Music (1733).

File:Handel Hornpipe from Water Music.wav
"Hornpipe" from Water Music
File:Handel Hornpipe from Water Music.svg
"Hornpipe" from Water Music

Christopher Hogwood (2005, p. 37) describes the Hornpipe as “possibly the most memorable movement in the collection, combining instrumental brilliance and rhythmic vitality… Woven amongst the running quavers are the insistent off-beat syncopations that symbolise confidence for Handel.”<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Bach's Brandenburg Concerto No. 4 features striking deviations from the established rhythmic norm in its first and third movements. According to Malcolm Boyd, each ritornello section of the first movement, "is clinched with an Epilog of syncopated antiphony":Template:Sfn

File:Bach Brandenburg Concerto No. 4 closing bars of first movement.wav
Bach Brandenburg Concerto No. 4 ending bars of first movement
File:Bach Brandenburg 4 closing bars of first movement.png
Bach Brandenburg Concerto No. 4 ending bars of the first movement

Boyd also hears the coda to the third movement as "remarkable... for the way the rhythm of the initial phrase of the fugue subject is expressed... with the accent thrown on to the second of the two minims (now staccato)":Template:Sfn

File:Bach Brandenburg 4 coda to the 3rd movement.wav
Bach Brandenburg Concerto No. 4 coda to the 3rd movement
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Bach Brandenburg Concerto No. 4 coda to the 3rd movement

Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, and Schubert used syncopation to create variety especially in their symphonies. The beginning movement of Beethoven's Eroica Symphony No. 3 exemplifies powerfully the uses of syncopation in a piece in triple time. After producing a pattern of three beats to a bar at the outset, Beethoven disrupts it through syncopation in a number of ways:

(1) By displacing the rhythmic emphasis to a weak part of the beat, as in the first violin part in bars 7–9:

File:Beethoven, Symphony No. 3, 1st movement bars 1-9.wav
Beethoven, Symphony No. 3, beginning of first movement
File:Eroica 1-9.png
Beethoven Symphony No. 3, beginning of first movement

Richard Taruskin describes here how "the first violins, entering immediately after the C sharp, are made palpably to totter for two bars".<ref name="WestHist">Template:Cite book</ref>

(2) By placing accents on normally weak beats, as in bars 25–26 and 28–35:

File:Beethoven, Symphony No. 3, first movement, bars 23-37.wav
Beethoven, Symphony No. 3, first movement, bars 23–37
File:Beethoven, Symphony No. 3, ist movement, bars 23-37, first violin part.png
Beethoven, Symphony No. 3, first movement, bars 23–37, first violin part

This "long sequence of syncopated sforzandi"<ref name="WestHist" /> recurs later during the development section of this movement, in a passage that Antony Hopkins describes as "a rhythmic pattern that rides roughshod over the properties of a normal three-in-a bar".<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

(3) By inserting silences (rests) at points where a listener might expect strong beats, in the words of George Grove, "nine bars of discords given fortissimo on the weak beats of the bar":<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

File:Beethoven, Symphony No. 3, first movement, bars 123-131.wav
Beethoven, Symphony No. 3, first movement, bars 123–131
File:Beethoven, Symphony No.3, first movement, bars 123-131, first violin part.png
Beethoven, Symphony No.3, first movement, bars 123–131, first violin part

See alsoEdit

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ReferencesEdit

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Sources

Further readingEdit

External linksEdit

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