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I’ve been reading a few books that are titled as if rhythm is a term that is interchangeable with time. I.e, I would have personally titled them something like the study of time in music or elements of time. From my understanding, motion (movement) and time are the two elements that create sound.

Some opinions I’ve come across online speak of pulse (beat), metre (ratio/time signature), tempo (speed), as being elements of rhythm but rhythm is it’s own concept in time, meaning these are all elements of time correct? I just want to make sure I am using the right terminology.

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    It depends on your definition of 'time' and of 'rhythm', but in general: no.
    – PiedPiper
    Commented Nov 23, 2023 at 14:34
  • "From my understanding, motion (movement) and time are the two elements that create sound": at what level of abstraction are you operating here? Acoustic? Music-theoretical? Something else? I guess I'm largely confused because you were talking about music and then you said "creates sound," which seems like a completely different area of analysis from "creates music."
    – phoog
    Commented Nov 23, 2023 at 15:36
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    this might be easier to answer if you pulled out specific examples that are problematic to you Commented Nov 23, 2023 at 15:39
  • @phoog I 100% just mean sound, as in pitch (definite and indefinite). But I personally would think that means motion and time are also the base elements of creating music as well.
    – Lecifer
    Commented Nov 23, 2023 at 15:42
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    @Lecifer I was exactly thinking about mentioning that video while considering the answer. That's an exceptionally interesting approach, and, in reality, probably the more correct in a general sense of "music": even if music involves rests, it requires sound; and sound requires time. Under many aspects, sound can be a form of rhythm, but we normally don't perceive it as such: in reality, what we call rhythm is a multiple-level abstraction that is more related to aspects we are aware (we cannot really get the "rhythm" of harmonics or chords). Commented Nov 24, 2023 at 5:52

2 Answers 2

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Rhythm, tempo, and meter are all different aspects of time. Meter and rhythm both describe the distribution of certain events over time, but meter is generally concerned with defining evenly spaced points in time as a framework for describing rhythm. Events described by rhythm do not need to be -- and often aren't -- evenly spaced.

Tempo describes the speed at which the events happen. That is, it determines the magnitude of the temporal spaces between the events.

In my experience "time" is a common synonym for meter, as in "six-eight time," or perhaps tempo, where for example "march time" implies not only a time signature of 2/4 but also a tempo of 120 quarter notes per minute.

The most common use of "rhythm" in my experience is to describe, for example, the difference between, for example, a pattern of three quarter notes as opposed to a pattern of a half note followed by two eighth notes or a dotted quarter followed by an eighth and a quarter. Each of these is a different rhythm, while they could have the same pitches and be used in the same meter at the same tempo.

Without knowing the titles of the books, it's difficult to say more about whether the authors' use of the word "time" is idiosyncratic or misleading.

The Rhythmic Structure of Music by Grosvenor Cooper and Leronard B. Meyer, The Philosophy of Rhythm by Peter Cheyne & New Musical Resources by Henry Cowell. None of them explicitly define all of the elements as aspects of Time except maybe The Rhythmic Structure of Music, because they do categorize them as Pulse, Metre, Rhythm, and Tempo

I don't know these books but I'll hazard a guess: pulse and meter are very similar, but these are both fairly low-level concepts. Pulse is just a series of evenly spaced moments in time with no properties other than tempo. Meter is a (usually periodic) organization of pulse (groups of two or three, for example) in terms of a specified hierarchy (that is, the pulses may be subdivided by a faster pulse that is 2 or 3 times more frequent). Again, tempo is primarily the speed at which things happen.

These are analogous to graph paper or to a grid that an artist might trace onto a canvas to help with perspective in a landscape. They are much more in the way of a framework onto which a composer can hang a rhythm. Rhythm is much more variable than meter, tempo, or pulse, and it is therefore the foremost parameter of time that a composer can use as an avenue of expression.

Most theory and composition textbooks speak of pitches: how do you put pitches together at the same time to create a harmony? How do you put pitches together one after another to create a melody? How do you put groups of pitches together one after the other to create a harmonic progression? But such programs of study frequently give little or no attention to the temporal aspects of these sequences of pitches or harmonies. They may mention "harmonic rhythm" -- the pace of chord changes, which can speed up or slow down during a phrase -- and they may point out instances where harmonic rhythm is used for some effect, but they rarely provide a coherent theory that one can use to analyze these considerations or to apply them to one's own compositions.

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  • The Rhythmic Structure of Music by Grosvenor Cooper and Leronard B. Meyer, The Philosophy of Rhythm by Peter Cheyne & New Musical Resources by Henry Cowell. None of them explicitly define all of the elements as aspects of Time except maybe The Rhythmic Structure of Music, because they do categorize them as Pulse, Metre, Rhythm, and Tempo.
    – Lecifer
    Commented Nov 23, 2023 at 16:03
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    @Lecifer ok, I suppose I see what's going on there, but it's a guess as I don't know the books specifically. I've edited the answer.
    – phoog
    Commented Nov 23, 2023 at 16:22
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'Time' is the pulse, 'Rhythm' is the pattern of notes. I suppose either COULD be used to describe the element of music that isn't pitch or timbre.

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