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Most music is written in 4/4 time, and in today’s world it seems to be the accepted norm. Now, that doesn’t mean mainstream music doesn’t use alternate meters, but it’s just less common than I imagined.

What made 4/4 time stand out and become the norm versus alternatives like 2/4 or even off signatures like 6/8?

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    Well, some parts of the world would disagree. This is as much about American/British pop music becoming ubiquitous as it is about preferences for certain rhythms. Commented Sep 13, 2019 at 12:44
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    @YourUncleBob - true enough, but this is probably aimed via Western music. And if it became ubiquitous, there was most likey a reason why.
    – Tim
    Commented Sep 13, 2019 at 12:59
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    @Tim I'd guess the ubiquity of American/British pop music is not linked to its rhythm, but to non-musical factors such as the economical and cultural aftermath of WW2. Commented Sep 13, 2019 at 13:36
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    @Bob, was the victory of rock’n roll not the 3rd world war? And later: the Nazis were better in marching 1234-1234 than in waltzing ... unless it was the waltz of their tanks. Commented Sep 13, 2019 at 13:48
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    Time signatures, written music, 4/4 and all of that is really a Western view of things, all other eyes closed. It might make the question better if it explicitly mentioned that only modern Western culture is considered. ;) Commented Sep 26, 2019 at 4:50

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Marches are generally in 4/4 (or 2/4 or 6/8, some binary division.) Likewise, most ballroom dances are in 4 (actually, dancers count to 8 but that's more technical that is called for here). Waltz and Viennese waltz are in 3/4 (maybe a few notated in 3/8 but not commonly.) Jigs (6/8 or 12/8) and tarantellas are not so common. Foxtrot, tango, rumba, mambo, bolero (American), quickstep, swing, western swing, cha-cha-cha, Texas two-step, Lindy-hop, salsa, paso doble, jive, nightclub two-step, etc. are all generally notated in 4/4. Some were in the late 1800s and early 1900s notated in 2/4 with an eighth note as pulse.

For some reason (which I will now have to research to satisfy my own curiosity), the breve isn't fast and the longa is really long. Since the 1500s or so, it seems that the quarter note has been the basic pulse indicator. I don't know why yet.

In modern notation, the time signature just carries relative rhythmic information, not basic tempo. Thus older tangos (see Todotango.com) and older rags (Library of Congress) and the like were notated in 2/4. One can re-write them in 4/4 and double the note lengths with no change. I like 4/4 as it's a nice compromise between too many flagged notes and too many open notes. Perhaps that's just because most things I read are in 4/4.

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    Hmmm... You make a good point that 4/4 isn't as common as it's often made out to be. I'd say that the large majority of modern western pop/commercial music is in 4/4, though. Rock, country, EDM, pop, rap, alternative, and the like are all based primarily on 4/4. I think the OP might implicitly be asking why that's the case for our current cultural moment.
    – Kevin
    Commented Sep 13, 2019 at 20:48
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    @Kevin There are important differences between genres. In some genres (country, rock, pop, rnb, rap) the occasional song in a 6/8 or 12/8 or 3/4 meter would not be considered unusual by the listener, while in other genres (most styles of EDM) a non-4/4 meter would result in injuries on the dance floor and the DJ being booed. And then there are metal styles in which a song with no odd or compound meters would leave fans disappointed. Commented Sep 28, 2019 at 16:45
  • "Since the 1500s or so, it seems that the quarter note has been the basic pulse indicator": this didn't really start until the 1600s; modern editions often reduce the note values. But having the half note as the basic unit of pulse persisted in certain styles, notably old-style polyphony. So for example Brahms wrote some pieces in 4/2.
    – phoog
    Commented Jan 24 at 23:56
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+100

Others have already addressed the aspects of dance and symmetry, so I'll take a slightly different approach.

The term "common time" refers to the use of "C" as a time signature. It looks like a C, and stands for 4/4, which happens to be the most common time signature, so people often explain it as "C stands for common time".

But it's not a C. It's an incomplete circle.

Early on, music was monophonic (think Gregorian chant), and we didn't really need time signatures. It wasn't until about 900 years ago that we started playing around with a second voice, and maybe 100 years later a second voice in a different rhythm. That's when we first realized we need to indicate meter.

At the time, most people were illiterate. The only folks who could read in the 11th and 12th centuries were clergy... so they put a lot of religious significance into everything they did. They considered 3 a perfect number (because it represented the idea of the Trinity), and a circle was a perfect shape - so a circle indicated a triple meter. A broken circle indicated "tempus imperfectus" (imperfect time) - anything that wasn't in 3.

As more complex meters developed, the circle thing became more elaborate. A circle within a circle was a compound triple meter - today we'd probably use 9/8 for that. A vertical line through the circle showed that it was triple meter, but the unit of the beat was a shorter note (the brevis) than the usual one (the 'longa').

Two of those early time signatures survive today, the tempus imperfectus: C for 4/4, and the alla breve (literally, "according to the brevis") for "cut time".

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  • I like that you present the historical detail that triple meter was considered "perfect" by ancient theorists. That doesn't answer the question, but it helps to understand metrical thinking. Commented Jan 26 at 16:12
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I do not believe there is a single comprehensive, sourced, and easily-falsifiable answer to this question, what you're asking is to some extent a question of psychoacoustics.

In light of this non-answerability, some observations:

  1. Your assumption is not universally true; it is true only when localized to a particular subset of music, largely modern Euro/colonial popular music. This likely indicates that reasons are largely cultural, more likely a matter of historical co-incidence than the logical and inevitable result of any fundamental property or truth of music. I do not know enough to vouch for the accuracy of Tom Serb's answer, but this is the sort of "historical co-incidence" framework that I am talking about, though not comprehensive (and to be clear -- "not comprehensive" is not a criticism of the answer, I reiterate that I do not believe there is a comprehensive answer).
  2. I'm not convinced your observation is true even within -- to pick an arbitrary and narrow time period for the sake of meaningful discussion -- contemporary American popular music. It is certainly true of top-40 pop, and I suspect true of film scores and other "popular-classical" traditions, but the further one explores outside these traditions, the stronger the skew towards unusual time signatures, it's one of the first tropes of mainstream music that people think to subvert*. I don't really know how one would verify that the majority of music within any meaningful scope is in fact in 4/4, especially given...
  3. The way we discuss time signatures is often, to some extent, a matter of theoretical interpretation. So-called "mumble rap", a not-insignificant portion of top-40 pop, tends to be described in terms of "triplet flow", implying that it is in 4/4, when it could just as reasonably be described in 12/8. It is possible that 4/4 is only ubiquitous because we insist on transcribing music that way. What does it even mean for a song to be "in 4/4", how many non-4/4 bars are allowed before "in 4/4" stops being an accurate description? What about songs heavily syncopated to the point where there are not actually four main pulses to the measure? Time signatures do not necessarily describe any innate property of music, they are merely a way of viewing music which is sometimes useful.

* I'm contradicting myself here, but I think this comment can be meaningfully understood with the caveat "if we are to take intuition and personal experience as a valid metric, which some framings of the question logically must, then I would personally say that..."

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  • if anyone can help me make that footnote e-reader friendly, that would be really cool of you
    – Esther
    Commented Oct 20, 2019 at 4:34
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I don't have enough for a complete answer here (and I missed the bounty anyway) but I have seen some historical documents that might help narrow this down. To be clear: I don't claim any of the sources I cite here were revolutionary in their terminology (quite the contrary); they just happen to be things I was looking at recently that may be relevant.

Early 18th Century Italian term - tempo perfetto

There's some information which may be of relevance in Francesco Gasparini's thoroughbass manual, L'Armonico Pratico al Cimbalo (The Parctical Harmonist at the Harpsichord) of 1708 -- there's an English translation on IMSLP, which I recently started skimming through (like one does). Gasparini, an Italian composer who trained in Rome under Corelli and Pasquini, moved to Venice and became the director of music at the Pieta girls orphanage, where he is best-known for hiring a violin teacher named Antionio Vivaldi.

There's a translator's note which points out that twice, Gasparini uses the term "tempo perfetto" to refer to what we would call "common time". Note that this is contrary to the much earlier use of tempus perfectus to refer to triple time, as documented in @TomSerb's answer. In fact, the translator acknowledges this difference in terminology, and points out that the older sense of "perfect time" (triple time) hadn't been used for about two centuries by that point (emphasis mine):

On two occasions Gasparini speaks of "tempo perfetto" ("perfect time"), but means thereby common time. In the first case (at Ex.31), which deals with quarter-note motion, Gasparini's words "in tempo perfetto, o binario" could mean "in perfect (triple) time, or in duple time," or "in perfect, that is, duple time"; the quarter-note progressions he describes, however, would be too complex for the fast pace of \ the only triple time that could be involved. The second case (at Ex.62) al- lows only the second interpretation, in which "tempo perfetto" is taken as another name for duple, or common time. In any case, the triple measures of the seventeenth century are—properly speaking—not in "perfect time" (this not having been in common use since the early sixteenth century), but are proportions, as Gasparini elsewhere calls them.

So speculating heavily, it seems that somewhere between the beginning of the 16th and the beginning of the 18th century, duple time became known as "perfect" (or perhaps "complete"?) time, which could possibly be the origin of it becoming common time in English. One passage in which Gasparini uses this term is while discussing cadences. He is discussing what he calls a "greater compound cadence" and describes it as: "The greater cadence is formed in tempo perfetto, using four counts, in the following way." He then lists a shows of bass figures that essentially correspond to the progression V - I6/4 - Vsus4 - V7 all over scale degree 5 (before resolving to I). So maybe this tempo was "perfect" (i.e. "complete") in that it had enough counts in a bar to complete this entire cadential progression?

English term 'Common Time' is at least as old as mid-18th century

As far as the English side of things, I just happen to have also recently been looking at "A New Musical Grammar" published in London, 1746, by William Tan'sur (imslp link). In this book, the term "Common Time" is used as a synonym for all duple or binary time.

enter image description here

Common time is then broken into further "moods", indicated by various time signatures. Note that this usage of time signatures isn't quite the same as either today's usage, or as the mensural signatures mentioned by Tom Serb, and the modern system of notation.

enter image description here

This description of various "moods" of common time, although it does not match classical practice, matches very closely to the description of time in early American Shape Note Hymnals, such as one from 1800 listed on this page (search for the first occurrence of "common time" on that page).

So like I said, this doesn't completely answer the question of why, but hopefully it at least narrows down the search parameters a bit as to when.

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I suppose the origin of rhythm is the movement of our body, and as we have 2 legs and 2 arms all repetitiv movements of mobility and working as walking, rowing, shaking etc. are in a binary rhythm. This would explain that march music, work songs and many folksongs for wandering are in 2/4 and 4/4.

In a slower tempo you can also feel triplets or alternately notate them in 6/8 or 12/8. Thus there isn’t abig difference between these 2 alternatives.

But there are also dance music in Bulgarian or Romanian dances as 5/8, 6/8 etc. that are derived from the dances: e.g. 4 steps left and turn (change the direction of dancing in a half circle. And then the 3/4 of the menuets and the waltz, of course, also giving time to turn around.

I try to give some evidence why 4/4 is more established than 3/4, 3/8, 5/8, 7/8 etc. short said broader than 3 or odd rhythm music and dances.

Edit:

  1. As already mentioned the moving of our body is not ternary but binary. Also the movements of a horse and dromedary which have been the vehicles and modes for transport during thousands of years across the desert, wandering nomads could hear the rhythm and stamping of their legs and feet. Many dances and songs are imitating this stamping (stampede), marching (march).

  2. The force of gravity leads to noises of a pendulum (this could be a chain, a rope on a ship, the ship, the waves of the water, a wheel turning round with a certain effect that gives a rhythmic noise inspiring a binary rhythm.

  3. The spoken language is in majority binary: already the rhythms of the Greek (Iambus, Anapaest etc.) have been in a binary rhythm. I've never heard a ternary RAP.

Mind that the early church rhythm and note lengths of longa, brevis, semibrevis etc. have been ternary (because of the Trinity of God) and I wouldn't wonder if it was not a kind of heresy when the first monks broke this rules.

May be you have seen some horses dancing a Waltz in 3/4. This must have been in the Circus or in the Reitschule in Vienna. But I have in my ear the rhythm of Bonanza: Dam-daba Dam-daba Dam-daba Dam-Bonanza!

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    -1 This answer doesn't seem like it's well-researched. You don't give any historical context, and you don't cite any evidence that the symmetry of 4/4 really is something psychologically ingrained in us. It seems like you wrote down the most obvious explanation without looking into whether it's really true or not. And, honestly, I'm very skeptical this really is this reason why 4/4 is so common.
    – Kevin
    Commented Sep 13, 2019 at 20:40
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    @Kevin - it seems a perfectly plausible answer to me. What's your answer? How can there be any historical context that explains the prevalence of meters based on 2 over meters based on 3 or more beats? Commented Sep 16, 2019 at 14:44
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    @Kevin - that's just passing the buck to "culture". Why would culture favor 4/4 over 3/4? Just accident? Commented Sep 24, 2019 at 17:17
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    @ScottWallace For example, I know that for EDM in particular, tracks are almost universally in 4/4 time, very rarely change key signatures or tempo, and follow a buildup-drop-breakdown structure. This is because the music is usually listened to at dances performed by a DJ, so EDM tracks follow these rules in order to be easily mixed and transitioned with other tracks. Historical cultures that lead up to modern western commercial music very could have had similar external factors shaping them, leading to 4/4 time being predominant.
    – Kevin
    Commented Sep 24, 2019 at 17:33
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    This is so obviously the best answer to the question. It doesn't need support with citations, it's pure common sense! Commented Jul 28, 2020 at 19:10
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Short answer : "most music is in 4/4" only if you don't look much outside western/european music and its derivatives. Indian folk/classical music for instance is replete with time signatures that warrant a life of study just by themselves. To these guys, playing in 4/4 all the time is a bit like playing everything in C major with 1/4/5 harmony would be to a jazz musician.

A better question to ask would be "why is most western music in 4/4". As other have suggested, perhaps this is to do with the relationship to walking and marching rhythms. We could also suggest that different musical cultures developed complexity along different "axes". In Europe we stayed mostly with binary and trinary rhythms, but really went for it in terms of harmony and form. Other cultures stayed with a less sophisticated harmonic concept, but embraced rhythmic and polyrhythmic variation much more deeply. (Then of course the various streams have merged in various ways since the early 20th century.)

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  • 4/4 wasn't ubiquitous in Europe either until recently. Plenty of folk music is in 3/4, Flamenco is in a complicated compound 12/8, and Balkan music uses a variety of odd meters. Commented Oct 2, 2019 at 20:35
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    yes, that's true. Most symphonies and concertos have a 3/4 movement, and so on.
    – danmcb
    Commented Oct 2, 2019 at 20:37
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    Not to mention waltzes, mazurkas, polonaises... When classical composers turned to folk music for dance rhythms, the result was often in 3/4. Commented Oct 2, 2019 at 21:00
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Probably the levelness of it. We like things to even up. That, maybe, puts 3/4 lower on the list. And a lot of people find the other odd ones, 5/4 and 7/4, well, odd. But that doesn't exclude 2/4 or even 6/8 - a derivative of 2/4.

There's a possibility that the basic drum rhythm has something to do with it. 2/4 repeats the pattern every two beats, or every bar. Too much of a good thing. But with 4/4 there's an opportunity to kick on beat one, then snare on beat three, giving balance, but spread out more.

Another possibility is that a lot of music was/is used for dancing, and 4 worked out to be the most suitable for lots of dance steps.

I feel that this will be dv'd - please try to qualify the reason!

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    The whole of flamenco culture seems to disagree with this answer. No Spaniard ever said "this is ridiculously complicated; why don't we just go boom-tack-boom-tack?" youtube.com/watch?v=yliXnfftN50&t=2m34s Commented Sep 13, 2019 at 13:40
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    @DavidBowling So what about the Balkan folk music tradition with its 5/8, 7/8, 9/8 and 11/8 rhythms? Commented Sep 13, 2019 at 14:15
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    -1 This answer doesn't seem like it's well-researched. You don't give any historical context, and you don't cite any evidence that the symmetry of 4/4 really is something psychologically ingrained in us. It seems like you wrote down the most obvious explanation without looking into whether it's really true or not. And, honestly, I'm very skeptical this really is this reason why 4/4 is so common.
    – Kevin
    Commented Sep 13, 2019 at 20:40
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    @nasch - 6/8 is NOT equivalent to 3/4, only in maths. 6/8 is two lots of three quavers, making it similar to 2/4 with triplets.
    – Tim
    Commented Sep 14, 2019 at 6:20
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    @nasch - the definition you use for 6/8 isn't the one that is generally accepted. It is not 'the same as 3/4'. There is the point that 6/8 is compound while 3/4 is simple. Therefore they cannot be the same. Of course they both contain the same but it's a bit more than that.
    – Tim
    Commented Sep 17, 2019 at 5:57
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It came from Valmiki, the composer of the Ramayana.

All Sanskrit shlokas are recited in a 4/4 time signature, which were composed in ancient India even before writing originated.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valmiki

The time metre is called an Anustubh https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anu%E1%B9%A3%E1%B9%ADubh

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  • Can you explain how the Ramayana came to influence the music of the rest of the world?
    – Theodore
    Commented Dec 30, 2022 at 15:10
  • Technically, everything in this world has influenced everything else. But specifically to your point, I haven't claimed Ramayana influenced 4/4 time signature, but perhaps Valmiki did. Recitation of sanskrit shlokas have followed 4/4 time signatures for millennia. you could research that yourself.
    – Arturo
    Commented Jan 1, 2023 at 11:59
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I think it’s because that’s all most rock drummers can play!

I am a percussion drummer. We know how ghost notes, and 7/4 time signatures, etc. can make things sound a bit groovier.

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  • In case you're wondering why you got downvoted: The question is about the history that led to 4/4 becoming so common. What you said might make a funny comment and would be OK there. Answers need to be more than a clever cut-down and boast.
    – Theodore
    Commented Jan 24 at 19:44

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