Most recent edit made on
2016-03-06 19:25:55 by UltraHeroABC5
[pages that were linked had no actual page]
Additions:
Sometimes, the term is incorrectly used to explain sections such as Hard Rain in Raining Blood, which is actaully a
gallop and has the following pattern:
Usually, you can "feel" the rhythm of triplets, and to speak the rhythm, you could say "tri-po-let" for every note with a rhythm and the notes will fit, but some sections such as Misirlou's intro have triplets in the musical meaning, since it contains 3 notes per beat despite not having a very understandable pattern. Basically, triplets can refer solely to 3 notes per beat rather than the "feel" of triplets.
Deletions:
Sometimes, the term is incorrectly used to explain sections such as Hard Rain in
Song_GH3_RainingBlood Raining Blood∞, which is actaully a
gallop and has the following pattern:
Usually, you can "feel" the rhythm of triplets, and to speak the rhythm, you could say "tri-po-let" for every note with a rhythm and the notes will fit, but some sections such as
Song_GH2_Misirlou Misirlou∞'s intro have triplets in the musical meaning, since it contains 3 notes per beat despite not having a very understandable pattern. Basically, triplets can refer solely to 3 notes per beat rather than the "feel" of triplets.
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GRYGRYGRYGRY
The correct way to notate such patterns is "A repeating pattern consisting of three notes and one rest of the same duration" (a 16th note duration in this case), although triplet is much easier to say.
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Additions:
Deletions:
Additions:
The correct way to notate this pattern is "A pattern of 3 16th notes followed by a 16th rest and then repeating itself", although triplet is much easier to say.
Usually, you can "feel" the rhythm of triplets, and to speak the rhythm, you could say "tri-po-let" for every note with a rhythm and the notes will fit, but some sections such as
Song_GH2_Misirlou Misirlou∞'s intro have triplets in the musical meaning, since it contains 3 notes per beat despite not having a very understandable pattern. Basically, triplets can refer solely to 3 notes per beat rather than the "feel" of triplets.
Edited on
2008-10-25 13:00:39 by NejiHyuuga777
[Fixed the definition of triplets (it's 3 per beat, not 3 per 2 beats) and added something.]
Additions:
A
triplet∞ is a musical term relating to a note duration which has three notes for every beat. For example 12 triplets would fit in one measure of 4/4 time, as would 24 16th triplets (or 24th notes), which has 6 notes for every beat. The term is more often used in Guitar Hero to signify a repetitive ascending or descending pattern of three notes, such as:
Sometimes, the term is incorrectly used to explain sections such as Hard Rain in
Song_GH3_RainingBlood Raining Blood∞, which has the following pattern:
Deletions:
A
triplet∞ is a musical term relating to a note duration which has three notes for every two straight beats: for example 12 8th notes would fit in one measure of 4/4 time, as would 24 16th notes. The term is more often used in Guitar Hero to signify a repetitive ascending or descending pattern of three notes, such as:
Edited on
2008-10-08 10:02:02 by Yewb
[changed definition of triplet and clarified, it's not just a note pattern]
Additions:
A
triplet∞ is a musical term relating to a note duration which has three notes for every two straight beats: for example 12 8th notes would fit in one measure of 4/4 time, as would 24 16th notes. The term is more often used in Guitar Hero to signify a repetitive ascending or descending pattern of three notes, such as:
Deletions:
A
triplet is a series of three notes, most often adjacent, that are
Hammer-ons hammered on or pulled off∞ repeatedly, starting with the lowest or highest note, and moving up or down the neck.
Additions:
Additions:
A
triplet is a series of three notes, most often adjacent, that are
Hammer-ons hammered on or pulled off∞ repeatedly, starting with the lowest or highest note, and moving up or down the neck.