Home
Drum Blog
Drum Forums
Drum Reviews
Lessons About Drum Shells
Beginner Lessons
Advanced Lessons
Bass Drum Lessons
Snare Drum Lessons
Bongo Lessons
Djembe Lessons
Drumhead Lessons
Drum Stick Lessons
Drum Rudiments
Drum Techniques
History of Drums
How To Read Music
How To Read Tab
How To Tune Drums
Types of Drums
Learn More About... Cheap Drums
Cymbals
Drum Bags
Drum Beats
Drum Books
Drum Corps
Drum Pads
Drum Pedals
Drum Magazines
Drum Racks
Drum Sheet Music
Drum Tabs
Guitar Tabs
Ear Training
Electronic Drums
Kids Drum Set
Play Drums Online
Virtual Drums
Manufacturers Drum Company List
DW Drums
Gretsch Drums
Ludwig Drums
Mapex
Pearl
Pork Pie
Roland Drums
Tama
Vic Firth
Yamaha
Yamaha Monitors
Cymbal Companies Paiste
Sabian
Zildjian
Drumhead Companies Evans
Remo
World Instruments African Drum
Brazilian Drum Music
Conga Drums
Japanese Drums
Misc. Contact
Links and Promos
Drum Store

Get the Latest Drumming News
XML RSS
Add to Google
Add to My Yahoo!
Add to My MSN
Subscribe with Bloglines
 

Time Signature





The time signature is the "fraction" you'll see at the beginning of drum sheet music, which tells you how to count the beat. This free drum lesson will cover the 4/4 signature, also known as "Common Time". See below for more on "Odd" time and for drum lessons covering counting time.



The most commonly used time is 4/4 which is found in most all modern "popular" music from the West. 3/4 is another signature you may see or hear a lot of.



As music progresses and artists strive for originality, you'll find more unique signature usage like 12/8, 15/16, 7/8, or 5/4 to name just a few. Learn more about "Odd" Time Signature.



So how do you read these numbers? Treated as a fraction, the top number (numerator) tells you how many beats are in a measure. In other words, it tells you how high to count. 4/4 times counts to 4. The count goes...1-2-3-4. 3/4 counts to 3. As in...1-2-3. 12/4 counts to 12...you get the idea.

The bottom number (denominator) tells you the value of the note. Four signifies quarter notes, 8 for eighth notes and 16 for sixteenth notes. For more help on the difference between note values and counting beats, check out this lesson on Reading Drum Music.

Now that you know how to read the signature , you may want to check out some Free Drum Sheet Music to practice counting.



See Even More Beginner Drum Lessons.


New! Comments

Leave your comments below.