TEORA  
 

TEORA > Høgskolen i Telemark > Fakultet for estetiske fag, folkekultur og lærerutdanning > Institutt for folkekultur >

English Norsk

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2282/1110

Files in This Item:

File Description SizeFormat
Johansson_2010.pdf626.85 kBAdobe PDFView/Open
Title: What is musical meter?
Authors: Johansson, Mats
Issue Date: 2010
Abstract: This article discusses the concept of musical meter, its most common definitions and their implications for musical analysis. It is shown that the concept has been notoriously difficult to define and that the core of the problem is the fluid relationship between sounding musical events and the framework (meter?) by which these events are structured. To illustrate how this problem relates to music perception and performance, four different, more or less overlapping, perspectives on meter are discussed: 1) Meter as a measuring device, specifying the temporal relationships between rhythmic units and levels (beats per measure etc.). 2) Meter as an imposed or inferred accentuation pattern (strong-weak-weak etc.). 3) Meter as an emerging property of the listener’s engagement with the unfolding music, implying that there is no pre-existing neutral grid in relation to which musical sounds are rhythmically structured. 4) A formulaic conception of meter: a stylistically coded (i.e. culture-specific) notion of sameness resulting from a continuously ongoing process of trying out different, but metrically equivalent, rhythmic designs.
Keywords: musikk
takt
rytme
Publisher: Novus
Document type: Journal article
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2282/1110
ISBN: 978-82-7099-615-5
Appears in Collections:Institutt for folkekultur

This item is protected by a usage licens. All items in TEORA are protected by copyright.

 

TEORA runs on DSpace 1.4
Telemark University College owns all rights for this page
Telemark University College, Library, Postboks 203, 3901 Porsgrunn
Telephone: 35952543, Email: teora@hit.no
Webmaster: Arild Skalmeraas
Technical webmaster: Rune Pettersen
Editor: Biblioteksjef Frode Bakken