What's The Deal With 6/8 Time ?

Count it out loud to the song and you'll get it.

ONE and a TWO and a THREE and a FOUR and a



ONE and TWO and THREE and

 
Count it out loud to the song and you'll get it.

ONE and a TWO and a THREE and a FOUR and a



ONE and TWO and THREE and



These are both 6/8.

As a helper, imagine drums. In 6/8, the snare will be on 4, in 3/4 the snare will be on 2 and 3 (with 3 being more important). In both of these tunes, it's on the 4th eighth note.
 
wats a cd?
JxIw6v0.jpg
 
Good question, and no, they're not really the same, but I can't explain it well enough.

Just don't ask if F# is the same as Gb! :rofl :rofl
 
By the way, since 6/8 can be counted as ONE 2 3, TWO, 2 3, with essentially 2 beats to each measure..., and you can then divide those 2 beats in half, you can get this feel:



And another example: The first time thru, it has that ONE 2 3, TWO 2 3, "Waltz" feel; the 2nd time, Portnoy morphs it into almost a 4/4 feel, same as the Yes song.



Both are the exact same notes being played under the drums. And both "could" still be written as 6/8. Or 4/4, with a tempo change.

Cool, huh?

I LOVE the math component of music!
 
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