In previous posts I’ve urged you to try using different time signatures in your songwriting. Why?
For several reasons.
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Doing music-nerdy stuff really appeals to certain types of music fan.
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Its a great way of
adding contrast, which is an absolute must if you’re to avoid boring your audience
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A lot of the time we don’t think about rhythm and meter as much as chords and melody. Changing time signature forces you to pay attention to these sometimes overlooked aspects of music.
What is a time signature, and how do you change it?
If you listen to Episode 7 of the songwright podcast you’ll hear a few ideas about how to change time signature, and this previous post talks about the basics of what they are.
In a nutshell, the time signature is the number of beats you have in a bar. You might have four beats in each bar, six, or seven. You could change every bar, change once in a song, or, like most songs, stick with one time signature all the time.
All of those options are creatively viable of course, I’d only urge you to think about it, rather than always composing in 4/4 like everybody else.