Originally posted by: Babbles
Originally posted by: SacrosanctFiend
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: sobriquet
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: sobriquet
I'm not going to deny that 4 is simpler than 5 or 7 (based on the premise than an easily divisible number is more simple). I just don't believe that it's somehow more natural. Are you saying that a tribesman couldn't pick up 5? If the strongest economic and cultural force on the planet was pumping out music in 5, are you confident that no one else would follow along?
No, what I'm saying is why do people and cultures without this influence pumping music do they still follow it?
without any cultural influence at all or even exposure to others?
Maybe the question then isn't why other people get along to 4/4 but rather why Western audiences don't get along to other meters. Maybe other musical cultures facilitate the feeling of numerous different meters, while Western listeners are largely limited to 4/4 (and to an extent 3/4). If you play 4/4 for someone who can groove to anything, they'll have no problem grooving to it.
I already addressed this - yes to you odd is good, even = bad.
But why the world wide dominance of 4 beats?
Last time I say this...genetics. Our sense of rhythm and time developed around our locomotion.
You can get into a sort of ridiculous argument and say that everything is genetics. This very well may be true, but then you can just say the answer to everything is just math as eventually everything just gets down to it. Again, this too would be correct but it has no practical meaning.
My point is by just stating that it is genetics, the answer to how the physiological processes work out is still not explained. Great, it's hidden in the DNA somewhere, but how does that physiologically get expressed? Where does one find the selective advantage to this? Is it part of the inner ear balance thing, maybe? Sounds reasonable, but I don't know.
Saying it is genetics is like when Dr. Dawkins goes on about his memes and that all cultural tendencies are genetics - well yeah, sure, we selectively change within a given population (or between population . . . drift and all of that other crap I forgot about), but it still doesn't actually really answer any real meaning on why we do things we do.