>song is entirely in 4/4 time
Is there a way to know when this happens without knowing music theory?
What do you listen to big boy?
I love house music
>>73418282
>The song changes time signatures 10 times
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XvIjxoNIuqo
>>73418306
>anything that doesn't change time signature to a randomly generated prime over 17 every measure at 578 BPM
fucking plebians
>>73418293
>>73418293
Yes -- Just continually count to four along with the pulse of the song. If the emphasis falls on the next "1" (as in "1" 2 3 4, "1" 2 3 4) then it's in 4/4
99% of music you listen to is in 4/4 unless you're into heavier genres (metal stuff) but even then the majority of it is still in 4/4
The pulse is what feels natural to bob your head to. Hint: the snare drum almost always hits on counts 2 and 4 of a 4/4 song
Count along. It can be literally any other song but I happened to be listening to this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pT68FS3YbQ4
>>73418407
>99% of music you listen to is in 4/4 unless you're into heavier genres
Prog genres too
>>73418282
Wow it must be hard to live like that
>song is in free time
>>73418486
>not listening to exclusively EAI
>>73418355
>constant 17th note gets the beat
That's not even hard
>>73418504
do it
>song only exists on a piece of paper