In music, metre (Am. meter) refers to the regularly recurring patterns and accents such as bars and beats. Unlike rhythm, metric onsets are not necessarily sounded, but are nevertheless expected by the listener. (from Wikipedia)That describes a whole lot of music. Everything, in fact, that falls into a regularly recurring pattern of strong and weak beats: 3/4, 4/4, even the obviously evil 5/4. Perhaps even the manifestly outré 13/8. But this does not capture all music, no indeed. Here are some examples of music that is without meter, or "ametric."
Now there are certainly durations there, even if notated in an unfamiliar way, but is there meter? I think not. Here is an example from the 12th century:
Just how this music is to be interpreted rhythmically is very unclear. As Willi Apel says, "Properly speaking, no transcription into modern notes is possible for music of this kind..." (The Notation of Polyphonic Music 900 - 1600 p. 210)
There is a whole stream of music from Gregorian chant to Messiaen that avoids regularly recurring patterns of strong and weak beats, i.e. meter. The great advantage of meter is that it is a powerful way to organize ensemble music or even to coordinate the different voices of music on a single instrument. But sometimes the music tends to overflow the meter as we see in Chopin:
In the antepenultimate measure the upper voice takes off and utters a long passage completely outside the meter. Our notation has long preserved a way of avoiding meter through the use, as here, of so-called "grace notes" which supposedly take "no time." In the cadenzas of concertos, the soloist need not observe any metrical restrictions. But even in orchestral music, some composers, such as Lutosławski, have passages where certain instruments are to play freely though within a fixed duration determined by the conductor.
Music without meter is still music with durations whether they are indicated loosely or exactly. In Messiaen's music, he frequently suggests birdsong in ametric passages (because one of the characteristics of birdsong is that it observes no meter):
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Lots of durations, but no real meter. I find, looking at my compositions, I have often tried to either weaken or eliminate a feeling of meter:
There are a host of other examples, of course, from the unmeasured preludes of the Baroque to all sorts of modern examples in John Cage, Morton Feldman and many others.
6 comments:
You should consider banning commentators who accuse you of throwing curveballs, but letting that slide for now...
The brain is set up to search for patterns and correlations. So it is commonplace that people will "find" patterns and correlations where none exist. The situation with passages lacking a strong tonal center or meter are more easily established by comparison than some absolute means. In the Chopin example the long series of interpolated grace notes is effective because of the strong meters surrounding it. Also the grace notes are of the same relative duration so there is no strong rhythm inherent to them.
With chant while there is no indicated meter there are historical indications that the singers observed short and long syllable values. So it is better to say that chant observes speech rhythms to some extent rather than musical meter.
As 20th C composers found it is very difficult to write music that truly sounds atonal or lacking in meter. Even much Vienna School serial music sounds vaguely tonal now and it is only the extreme music of the post WW2 serialists that has a more rigorous atonal sound. The John Cage Fontana Mix tapes are without meter and fairly random sounds.. However, the critic Peter Yates in attending a concert where it was played noted several in the audience tapping their feet to the sounds!
Thus I think a work without meter sets up a dynamic where the listener searches for a pattern rather than really concentrating on the listening experience. Conversely when a relatively meterless passage occurs in the context of metered passages then they both can be enjoyed more easily for the contrast without the listener trying to impose a clearer patter on the metrically vague sections.
That's ok, I just throw a knuckleball back!
Yes, quite right the brain does look for recurring patterns and in most music with a clear meter we quickly settle down into the pattern and look to enjoy the melody and harmony. In my music I am often trying to get away from those patterns. This is possibly because what I want the listener to really pay attention to is the phrases and durations and so I don't want to have a predictable pattern. Meter often feels to me like a Procrustean bed.
When I hear music of durations but without meter as such, as in some unaccompanied chant, I love the fact that it seems to float without a regular pulse.
I am totally with you in having mixed feelings about strongly metrical music. That's why I have always liked Early music which while it had strict rhythmic organization was not consistently metrical in modern terms eg hemiola. There are many ways to loosen the metrical organization of a work short of stripping the music of any sensation of meter.
My point is that sometimes too aggressively going without meter over an extended duration causes a reaction on the part of the listener to search for a pattern rather than listen to the music. But I don't perceive that in your works under discussion. You apparently are going to have metrically organized passages and metrically unorganized passages in the pieces. But you will probably have to struggle with the musicians to really make a strong distinction between the two. A string quartet is based on close interplay of the parts and metrical organization facilitates interpretation. A more randomly instrumented ensemble might be easier to manage for this purpose.
That's a very interesting comment about the metric predilections of string quartets. You don't think they are just going to be deeply grateful I didn't write something monstrously difficult like Elliot Carter?
I have worked in moment form, which is nicely non-metrical, with a number of musicians, including string quartet players, but not with a string quartet as such. Looking forward to that.
Several years ago I wrote a piece with five levels of hemiola.
I just wrote a piece in 4/4 that really isn't in a meter. There are so many tied notes, fermatas and patterns that just ignore the barlines that I doubt a listener could pick out a meter. It's not hard to play, either.
By the way, thanks for the ongoing advice, Maury. You have done some composition, I gather?
I love "ametric"! Now I'm mad at myself for not inventing it ... O well, at least I know the guy that did ...
p.s. Send it to the OED .....
It seems obvious in retrospect, doesn't it?
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