Re : Derniers achats
Ca se saurait, aurais-je manqué cet instant magique ?
Non c'était pour dire que t'étais le seul à attendre.
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Ca se saurait, aurais-je manqué cet instant magique ?
Non c'était pour dire que t'étais le seul à attendre.
Bah peut-être, mais chose promise, chose pute. Ca joue les attention whores à tour de bras, mais dès qu'il faut passer à l'action plus personne.
Merde, j'ai l'impression de parler de moi en fait.
Je vote pour soja qui se fait chier au boulot.
Et nap' si tu t'emmerdes au taf, il y a toujours un topic pute percées et tatouées qui attends que tu le remplisses.
Et nap' si tu t'emmerdes au taf, il y a toujours un topic pute percées et tatouées qui attends que tu le remplisses.
Tous les sites du genre sont bloqués au taff
Je savais pas trop quoi prendre alors j'ai choisi un peu au pif :
ARPEGGIO x10
DECAFFEINATO INTENSO x10
CAPRICCIO x10
VIVALTO LUNGO x10
DECAFFEINATO LUNGO x10
Comme ça je pourrais cogner thermostat sans me faire mal aux phalanges à la prochaine zilcon
Sinon je pense que je vais essayer de négocier pour que ma famille de débiles investisse dans un sac de frappe à la place des livres de cuisines débiles ou autres cadeaux inutiles qui ne me plaisent de toutes les façons pas pour mon anniv.
@ Topy : Si je n'ai pas pris de pix de moi avec l'ensemble acheté, je pense que tu aurais du t'en douter mais c'est parce que j'en ai renvoyé une partie. J'ai gardé que le soutif de putasse parce que le serre taille était un chouïa trop grand et quand j'aurais la motiv je m'acheterai une culotte transparente de biatch qui va avec. Mais de toutes les façons tout le monde s'en branle à part toi.
Ca ira bien avec ton string en V.
hohun a écrit:blabla
Ce débat me fait chier avant même d'avoir vraiment commencé. Déjà parce que ni toi ni moi (surtout toi d'ailleurs) ne disposons des acquis suffisants pour tenir une conversation soutenue et constructive sur le sujet, et d'une autre part parce que nous n'avons vraisemblablement pas la même notion du mot "atypique".
Oui, j'ai remarqué ça aussi.
hohun a écrit:Après, oui, c'est certain, je ne connais pas le solfège et il est bien probable que je n'ai pas entendu que du 7/4 mais des trucs s'en rapprochant.
Ça doit être ça oui, ou sinon j'attends bien volontiers les exemples de chansons qui utilisent ce rythme. Et on en revient à ce que je disais précédemment, t'as peut-être l'impression que c'est pas spécialement hors du commun, mais de mon point de vue (c'est à dire du point de vue de quelqu'un qui a été récupérer une bonne cinquantaine de partitions pour les jouer), des chansons en 7/4 ou en 7/8 c'est rare. Ça plus le fait que ce soit noté un peu partout sur l'internet = atypique.
Mais si tu veux on peut continuer à dire que, parce que ça t'est familier, c'est un rythme courant hein.
Si je devais noter le nom de toutes les chansons que j'écoute, mon cerveau aurait déjà explosé. A écouter de la musique à gauche à droite, dans des bars (si), chez des potes proches et moins proches, chez des inconnus, dans d'autres pays, dans la période où je fréquentais des amoureux de la culture d'europe de l'est, en effet j'ai pas retenu.
Mais sinon on peut essayer de trouver des trucs de gens qui s'y connaissent un peu plus que moi pour que je ne dise pas trop de conneries.
Alice In Chains - Them Bones
Beatles - All You Need Is Love
Bloc Party - Song for Clay (Disappear here)
Blondie - Heart Of Glass
Broken Social Scene - 7/4 Shoreline
Dream Theater - Forsaken
Foo Fighters - Times Like These
Genesis - Back in NYC
Genesis - Turn It On Again
John Frusciante - The Past Recedes
Kamelot - Abandoned
Led Zeppelin - The Ocean
Tubular Bells - Mike Oldfield
Misery Signals - The Year Summer Ended in June (parts in 5/8 as well)
Pink Floyd - Money
Pretenders - Tattooed Love Boys
Porcupine Tree - Dark Matter
Porcupine Tree - The Sound of Muzak
Radiohead - 2+2=5
Rush - Limelight
Rush - Tom Sawyer
Soundgarden - Outshined
Soundgarden - Spoonman
Stranglers - Golden Brown
Toadies - Possum Kingdom
Tool - Ticks and Leeches
Tool - Parts of "Sweat"
Devo - Jocko Homo
Metallica - Blackened
Joe Satriani -The Meaning of Love
Opeth - Deliverance
Plus ça !url!
Et ça !url!
7/4
''septuple meter''
★ (1886) Piano Trio no. 3 in C minor, Op. 101, by Johannes Brahms - this movement is actually notated as a pattern of 3/4 +2/4 + 2/4 bars.
★ (1949) Part 1: Section B: Variation 10 - Più Mosso, from Leonard Bernstein's Second Symphony ''(The Age of Anxiety)'', 4/4+3/4
★ (1951) Prelude No 14 in E flat minor, from ''24 Preludes and Fugues'', Op.87, by Shostakovich
★ (1962) "Three's A Crowd" by Dave Brubeck
★ (1968) "The Legend Of The Golden Arches" by Frank Zappa - 7/4, phrased as 3/8, 4/8, 3/8, 4/8.
★ (1968) "A Pound For A Brown On The Bus" by Frank Zappa - it's practically a sped up "Legend of the Golden Arches", in a faster 7/4.
★ (1969) Theme from ''Room 222'' by Jerry Goldsmith
★ (1970) "Atropos" by Emerson, Lake & Palmer
★ (1970) "Oh No" by Frank Zappa - 4/4 + 3/4
★ (1971) "Money" by Pink Floyd
★ (1971) "Love To Love You" by Caravan
★ (1972) "Dawn" by Mahavishnu Orchestra
★ (1973) "Hope" by Mahavishnu Orchestra
★ (1973) "Trilogy: The Sunlit Path/La Mere De La Mer/Tomorrow Story Not The Same" by Mahavishnu Orchestra, also included on the 1999 release of the Lost Trident Sessions.
★ (1973) "Cool Jerk" as covered by Todd Rundgren
★ (1974) "Aire" by Chicago
★ (1974) "Lion Tamer" by Stephen Schwartz (from the musical ''The Magic Show'')
★ (1974) "Mysterious Traveller" by Weather Report
★ (1974) "Inca Roads" by Frank Zappa - besides changing meter many times, one interlude is in 7/16.
★ (1975) "Lucky Seven" by Chris Squire
★ (1975) "Be Happy" by Mahavishnu Orchestra
★ (1976) "Lazy Lightning" by Grateful Dead
★ (1976) "Solsbury Hill" by Peter Gabriel
★ (1976) "Supplication" by Grateful Dead
★ (1976) "Sophie" by Jeff Beck
★ (1977) "Estimated Prophet" by Grateful Dead[1]
★ (1979) "Desire And The Comforter" by John McLaughlin
★ (1979) "To Go Off And Things" by Cardiacs
★ (1980) "Take It or Leave It" by Madness
★ (1983) "Seventh Heaven" by L. Subramaniam
★ (1983) "Cinema" by Yes - except for sections in 3/4.
★ (1987) "Straight To My Heart" by Sting
★ (1989) "Have You Heard" by Pat Metheny Group - head is primarily in 7/4 with changes into 5/4 and 3/4 back and forth and a 4/4 solo section.
★ (1993) "Neglect" by Crossed Out
★ (1994) "Just a Working Girl" by Moonshake
★ (1995) "Year of the Parrot" by Primus
★ (1995) "Right Hand Man" by Joan Osborne
★ (1996) "Dark Matter" by Porcupine Tree
★ (1996) "Motoroller Scalatron" by Stereolab
★ (1996) "Superstar" by Soda Stereo
★ (1997) "Rickets" by Deftones
★ (1997) "Seven Sisters" by John McLaughlin
★ (1997) "Circlesong One" by Bobby Mcferrin
★ (1998) "Queen of All Ears" by The Lounge Lizards
★ (1999) "Spider in the Snow" by The Dismemberment Plan: album Emergency & I
★ (1999) "Stay Home" by American Football
★ (2000) "Flood" by Boris (first movement)
★ (2000) "Renhölder" by A Perfect Circle: album Mer de Noms
★ (2000) "XQuiQ" by Estradasphere
★ (2000) "Big Exit" by PJ Harvey
★ (2002) "Invitation to a Suicide" by John Zorn
★ (2002) "Solitary Shell" by Dream Theater (intro/verses)
★ (2003) "The Closest Thing to Crazy" by Katie Melua
★ (2003) "March", "Shadows", "Independence" by Ring,Cicada
★ (2003) "She's Got Your Eyes" by +/-
★ (2003) "Mekapses Yitonisa" by Estradasphere
★ (2004) "Life's Just Too Short Little Ndugu" by Moneen - has 5/4 measures during verses and interlude.
★ (2004) "Hecate Pose" by Love Outside Andromeda
★ (2004) "Veefun" by Eu
★ (2004) "Moonglow" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Blackout" by Amusement Parks on Fire
★ (2005) "The Inborn Mechanics" by Coprofago
★ (2005) "7/4 (Shoreline)" by Broken Social Scene
★ (2005) "We're All Thieves" by Circa Survive
★ (2005) "Starship Groove" by Animusic
★ (2005) "Szerencsétlen" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Öngyilkos Vasárnap" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Hajnal" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Második Galamb" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Szamár Madár" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Kétsarkú Mozgalom" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Aanguish" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Choprite" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Des Plaines" by Venetian Snares - phrased as 5/8 + 5/8 + 4/8.
★ (2005) "Sinthasomphone" by Venetian Snares - phrased as 6/8 + 4/8 + 4/8.
★ (2005) "Szycag" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Dear Mister Supercomputer" by Sufjan Stevens - the chorus counts it out: ''One, two, three, four, five, six, seven/All computers go to heaven''
★ (2006) "Swindon" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Pwntendo" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Vache" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Plunging Hornets" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Tache" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Laps in Seven" by Sam Bush
★ (2006) "Frictional Nevada" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Duffy" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Cabbage" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Hospitality" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Leap Year" by +/-
★ (2006) "Senseless" by Theatre of Tragedy
★ (2006) "This Mess" by Hundred Reasons
★ (2006) "(5-2)+4" by the Staboola McPet Quintet
Partially in 7/4★ (1856) "Dante" Symphony by Franz Liszt - a section in the first movement.
★ (1895) Around this time, Alexander Scriabin started introducing 7/4 time into minor motifs, then into themes and phrases, and often played against 3/4, 3/8, 4/4, 5/4 or 6/8 in the other hand. There are hundreds of examples.
★ (1910) "The Firebird" by Igor Stravinsky - ending section.
★ (1936) ''Tanz'' from "Carmina Burana" by Carl Orff.
★ (1963) "Ring of Fire" by Johnny Cash - trumpet section plays 3/4 + 4/4 sections.
★ (1965) "Chichester Psalms" by Leonard Bernstein - First Movement.
★ (1967) "Comin' Back to Me" by Jefferson Airplane - each section where Marty Balin sings "I saw you...".
★ (1967) "All You Need Is Love" by The Beatles - verse in 7/4, chorus in 4/4.
★ (1967) "Strawberry Fields Forever" by The Beatles - The "strawberry fields forever" parts are in 7/4 preceded by a 2/4 bar.
★ (1970) "Uncle John's Band" by The Grateful Dead - instrumental section in 7/4.
★ (1970) "Perpetual Change" by Yes - an instrumental section is in 7/4.
★ (1972) "Roundabout" by Yes - contrapuntal vocal section at end is in 7/4.
★ (1972) "Soul Love" by David Bowie - verses.
★ (1973) "The Battle of Epping Forest" by Genesis - introduction and verse in 7/4.
★ (1973) "The Cinema Show" by Genesis - extended keyboard solo in 7/4.
★ (1973) "Money" by Pink Floyd. Predominantly in 7/4. The guitar solo section is in 4/4, as David Gilmour felt it would be too difficult in simple septuple meter. Some may argue the song is (primarily) in 21/8 time, as it has a swing triplet feel.
★ (1973) "The Ancient" by Yes - an instrumental section is in 7/4.
★ (1974) "Don't Eat the Yellow Snow" by Frank Zappa - all but the "Watch out where the huskies go" interpolation which is in 4/4.
★ (1974) "Money Money" by Grateful Dead - much is in 7/4 but also alternates to 4/4 and 6/4.
★ (1975) "All the World" by Kansas - 7/4 section in instrumental break in middle of song.
★ (1975) "Have a Good Time" by Paul Simon – - verses in 7/4, chorus in 4/4.
★ (1975) "Jive Talkin'" by Bee Gees - instrumental break in 7/4 (3/4 + 4/4).
★ (1975) "By-Tor and the Snow Dog" by Rush - the "7/4 War Furor" subsection of the "Battle" section.
★ (1975) "Down Home Town" by Electric Light Orchestra - verses.
★ (1976) "Go To Hell" by Alice Cooper - verse
★ (1977) "A Farewell to Kings" by Rush - section in beginning and end of song (4/4 + 3/4).
★ (1977) "Barracuda" by Heart - Outro in 7/4.
★ (1977) "Xanadu" by Rush - intro (after volume swells) is in 7/4.
★ (1977) "Fooling Yourself (The Angry Young Man)" by Styx - the keyboard solo in the middle of the song. (Note: there are also two measures of 5/8 in the song's closing sequence).
★ (1978) "Curfew" by The Stranglers - verses.
★ (1978) "Accidentally Like A Martyr" by Warren Zevon - the piano bridge.
★ (1978) "La Villa Strangiato (An Exercise in Self-Indulgence)" by Rush - "A Lerxst In Wonderland" section is in 7/4.
★ (1978) "In the Dead of Night" by UK - 1st and 3rd sections in 7/4, 2nd section ("By the Light of Day") in 5/4.
★ (1978) "How Much I Feel" by Ambrosia - first part of bridge section in 7/4 (3/4 + 4/4), rest of song in 4/4.
★ (1979) "Heart of Glass" by Blondie - the instrumental break, later changes to 4/4.
★ (1980) "The Wait" by The Pretenders - verses only, the rest is in 4/4.
★ (1980) "The Spirit of Radio" by Rush - first part of middle instrumental section is 7/4 (4/4 + 3/4), every fourth measure of the 7/4 section is 2 bars of 4/4.
★ (1981) "Wired For Sound" by Cliff Richard - the chorus works out into 7/4.
★ (1981) "Little Girls" by Oingo Boingo - verses.
★ (1981) "Limelight" by Rush - intro and verses (4/4 + 3/4).
★ (1981) "Red Barchetta" by Rush - guitar solo and short instrumental section before final verse (4/4 + 3/4).
★ (1981) "Diary of a Madman" by Ozzy Osbourne - verses in 7/4.
★ (1982) "I Love Rock N' Roll" by Joan Jett - measure of 7/4 (4/4 + 3/4) in the intro, several measures in the last chorus of the song.
★ (1982) "Afraid of Love" by Toto - verses in 7/4.
★ (1982) "Read About It" by Midnight Oil - part of the intro is in 7/4.
★ (1983) "Our Song" by Yes - intro theme in 7/4, used a few times throughout the song.
★ (1983) "Faster Than the Speed of Night" by Bonnie Tyler - short 7/4 sections in the verses.
★ (1984) "Building the Perfect Beast" by Don Henley - a few bars here and there are in 4/4, which heightens the feeling of unevenness in the time signature.
★ (1985) "Addicted to Love" by Robert Palmer - the intro drum solo is 7/4 while the rest of the song is in 4/4.
★ (1985) "Marathon" by Rush – bridge in half time feel 7/4.
★ (1987) "Time Stand Still" by Rush – -intro in 7/4, guitar/bass/"ooh" vocal interlude in 7/4 .
★ (1988) "Blackened" by Metallica – the main/bridge riff is 7/4, the verse is in 6/4.
★ (1988) "Waiting For 22" by Queensrÿche – in 7/4 but changes to 4/4 later.
★ (1989) "Superconductor" by Rush – intro & verses.
★ (1990) "Got The Time" by Anthrax
★ (1990) "Best I Can" by Queensrÿche – bridge, instrumental break, and fade-out.
★ (1990) "Resistance" by Queensrÿche – intro, played as 3+2+2.
★ (1990) "Carnage in the Temple of the Damned" by Deicide – the section preceding the scream of the song title, and where Glen Benton delivers a sort of death-growl rap if you will, is in 7/4.
★ (1991) "Caress" by Drive Like Jehu - main verses.
★ (1991) "Beeswax" by Nirvana – chorus
★ (1991) "Breadcrumb Trail" by Slint - beginning segment.
★ (1991) "Obstruction" by Living Sacrifice - intro and bridge in 7/4, rest is in 4/4.
★ (1991) "Outshined" by Soundgarden – verse and instrumentals
★ (1991) "In Lonesome Dove" by Garth Brooks – verses are mostly in 7/4.
★ (1991) "Small Town Saturday Night" by Hal Ketchum – verses
★ (1993) "4°" by Tool – intro and chorus.
★ (1993) "Awake and Nervous" by IQ; intro and chorus.
★ (1993) "Jack's Obsession" by Danny Elfman from The Nightmare Before Christmas
★ (1994) "Yes" by Manic Street Preachers – alternates between 7/8 and 8/8 in verses
★ (1994) "Riverdance" by Bill Whelan
★ (1994) "Damaged" by Queensrÿche – bridge.
★ (1994) "Spoonman" by Soundgarden
★ (1994) "Night Is Fallin' in My Heart" by Diamond Rio - intro and portion of chorus feature bars of 7/4
★ (1995) "If I Can't Have You" by Eve's Plum
★ (1995) "Wattershed" by Foo Fighters – bridge.
★ (1995) "Buy Me a Pony" by Spiderbait – also contains 6/4 and 4/4.
★ (1996) "Desperately Wanting" by Better Than Ezra – 4 measures of 7/4 during bridge.
★ (1996) "Forty Six & 2" by Tool – two bars in the intro, drum solo, and majority of ending .
★ (1996) "Legions of the Betrayed" by Quo Vadis – ends in 7/4.
★ (1996) "Politics, Religion, and Her" by Sammy Kershaw – verses.
★ (1996) "A Life of Arctic Sounds" by Modest Mouse – second verse is in 7/4
★ (1997) "Post Modern Sleaze" by Sneaker Pimps
★ (1997) "The Divine Wings of Tragedy" by Symphony X
★ (1997) "Out of the Ashes" by Symphony X – intro guitar riff and pre-choruses are in 7/4.
★ (1997) "Elephant Riders" by Clutch – verse is in 4/4, prechorus is in 9/4, chorus is in 7/4.
★ (1997) "Down in a Ditch" by Joe Diffie - portion of chorus is in 7/4
★ (1998) "Comin' Home" by HUM – verse in 7/4, chorus in 4/4, intro & bridge in 6/4.
★ (1998) "Against" by Sepultura
★ (1998) "Goin' Home" by Toto
★ (1999) "Make Yourself" by Incubus
★ (1999) "Wrong Way" by Creed
★ (1999) "Down with the Sickness" by Disturbed – bridge.
★ (1999) "The Death of Passion" by Nevermore – the end is in 7/4 .
★ (1999) "Running Board" by The Dillinger Escape Plan has a section in 7/4.
★ (1999) "Othello" by Chicago Underground Trio
★ (2000) "If Credit's What Matters I'll Take Credit" by Hot Snakes from the album ''Automatic Midnight''
★ (2000) "Communion and The Oracle" by Symphony X - instrumental pre-verses/pre-choruses and chorus section in 7/4
★ (2001) "Automatic" by The Dismemberment Plan – album: Change – all but chorus in 7/4.
★ (2001) "Airborne" by Jaga Jazzist from the album "A Livingroom Hush"; first part is in 6/8, the remainder of the song is in 7/4.
★ (2001) "Push the Hand" by Toadies – verse is three measures of 7/4, followed by one measure of 8/4.
★ (2001) "Carne Voodoo" by Rocket From The Crypt – opening.
★ (2001) "Ticks and Leeches" by Tool – The majority of the song is in 7/4, with occasional switches to 4/4 (or 8/4)
★ (2001) "The Shape" by Slipknot – from Iowa.
★ (2002) "The Monkey Versus the Robot" by Piebald – verses in 7/4, chorus in 6/4 and the breakdown in 4/4.
★ (2002) "Moodswings" by My Vitriol – instrumental break at beginning and end.
★ (2002) "A good example of arbitrary presumption" by Sphere3 – main verse sections
★ (2002) "The Sound of Muzak" by Porcupine Tree – verse and instrumental.
★ (2002) "Wedding Nails" by Porcupine Tree – contains a measure of 7/4 at 1:41.
★ (2002) "Times Like These" by Foo Fighters – instrumental bridges only.
★ (2002) "King Of Terrors" by Symphony X – intro alternates between 7/4 and 8/4; verse alternates between 7/4 and 6/4.
★ (2003) "1010011010" by Cog – contains sections in 9/4, 6/8 and 4/4.
★ (2003) "Inertiatic ESP" by The Mars Volta – bridge.
★ (2003) "Panic Attack" by Finger Eleven – verses.
★ (2003) "Ride" by Samuel Hazo – features a large 7/4 section, along with many sections with varied and polyrhythmic meters.
★ (2003) "Hardball" by Estradasphere – has much variation between 4/4 and 7/4.
★ (2003) "2+2=5" by Radiohead – begins in 7/4 time and then switches to 4/4 1 minute and 22 seconds into the song (right after the words "two & two always makes five").
★ (2003) "This Dying Soul" by Dream Theater - instrumental bridge before final guitar solo
★ (2003)"I Won't See You Tonight p.2" by Avenged Sevenfold – the riff behind the guitar solo is in 7/4.
★ (2004) "A Canon" by Regina Spektor – first line. of pre-chorusish part features a bar in 7/4 ("I always knew it was coming this way...")
★ (2004) "Builder" by Gavin Castleton.
★ (2004) "Consequences David, You'll Meet Your Fate in the Styx" by Fear Before the March of Flames – contains parts in 3/4.
★ (2004) "Fuck Me for Free" by Recover – the verse is in 7/4.
★ (2004) "Little Thoughts" by Bloc Party – ending in 7/4.
★ (2004) "Blackmail the Universe" by Megadeth
★ (2004) "Sunrise" by Norah Jones – bridge only.
★ (2004) "Sacred Sound" by IQ - intro.
★ (2004) "Two Sides" by After Forever – beginning section, repeated later in song.
★ (2004) "Through Square Eyes" by After Forever – section about 4 minutes into the song.
★ (2004) "Hey! Is That a Ninja Up There?" by Minus the Bear – intro in 7/4, verses in 4/4, chorus in 7/4 and the bridge in 6/4.
★ (2004) "About to Rage" by Gov't Mule – verses in 7/4; chorus is 4/4, 4/4, 4/4, 3/4 played twice; most of solo section in 8/4 counted 2+3+3.
★ (2004) "Seven" by Necrophagist
★ (2004) "Yawn, Yawn, Yawn" by Les Savy Fav – verses.
★ (2005) "Protecting Me" by Aly & AJ
★ (2005) "Michio's Death Drive" by Minus the Bear – section in 7/4.
★ (2005) "Between the End and Where We Lie" by Thrice – can also be expressed in 7/8 and 9/8 combination; chorus is 7/4 + 2 measures 4/4.
★ (2005) "So Called Friend" by Porcupine Tree [2]
★ (2005) "Going to Peterborough" by Carpetburn - middle section played in 7/4.
★ (2005) "Deadwing" by Porcupine Tree
★ (2005) "That's Where It Is" by Carrie Underwood
★ (2005) "Wanderlust" by R.E.M. - chorus partially 7/4
★ (2006) "Detonation" by Trivium 7/4 in the intro to the song. Verses have 4/4, 2/4, 4/4 structure. Rest of song is 4/4.
★ (2006) "Inefficiencity" by Dan Webb
★ (2006) "Crazy People" by Dynamic Monotone - every other measure in instrumental break
★ (2006) "Laps In Seven" by Sam Bush
★ (2006) "The Allegory of Benjamin Franklin" by Pomme De Chien – heavy sections in 7/4 or 4+3.
★ (2006) "Brighter than a Thousand Suns" by Iron Maiden
★ (2006) "Bees" by The Tunguska Event - between second chorus and solo.
★ (2006) "Flathead" by The Fratellis – chant section.
★ (2006) "Attack of the 10 Octave Marimba" by the Lawless Percussion & Jazz Ensemble.
★ (2006) "Mudlark" by Kill Your Ex – most of the song is in 7/4.
★ (2006) "Fadeout" by +/-
★ (2006) "Gone" by Daughtry
★ (2006) "Jerry Likes My Corn" by Scott Frankel (music) and Michael Korie (lyrics) from the musical Grey Gardens
★ (2006) "Just Might Have Her Radio On" by Trent Tomlinson
★ (2007) "A Different World" by Bucky Covington - verse
★ (2007) "Most Girls" by Lea - bridge
★ (2007) "Fine Mattress" by Wruice Deuce
★ (2007) "222" by Paul McCartney
★ (2007) "Red Fox" by Tomahawk
7/8''septuple meter, usually 2+2+3''
★ (?) "Inspiration" by Jan de Haan for concert band - end section alternates between 4/4, 2/4, and 3/2
★ (1854) "Faust" Symphony by Franz Liszt (original version)
★ (1915) "Pantomime", from ''El amor brujo'', by Manuel de Falla
★ (1961) "Unsquare Dance" by Dave Brubeck
★ (1967) "Who's the Thief" by Andrew Lloyd Webber from Joseph And The Amazing Technicolour Dreamcoat
★ (1968) "Market Song" by Pentangle from the album Sweet Child
★ (1970) "The Temple" by Andrew Lloyd Webber from Jesus Christ Superstar
★ (1970) "Working Class Hero" by John Lennon
★ (1971) "Rubylove" by Cat Stevens, from the album Teaser and the Firecat, in 3+2+2, the typical Greek kalamatianos rhythm, with a verse in Greek.
★ (1971) "The Fish (''Schindleria Praematurus'')" by Yes (''Fragile'')
★ (1974) "Back in NYC" by Genesis - 7/8 with a few bars of 6/8 scattered throughout
★ (1975) "Migration" by Camel
★ (1976) "Dance on a Volcano" by Genesis
★ (1977) "Slava!" by Leonard Bernstein
★ (1977) "Beneath The Earth" by Alphonse Mouzon & Larry Coryell
★ (1975) "Aurora, Pt. 2" by Jean-Luc Ponty
★ (1980s) "Marching Season", "Keys to Imagination", "Within Attraction", "Santorini," and "Waltz in 7/8" by Yanni
★ (1983) "Tower Hill" by Clannad. In 7/8 throughout.
★ (1983) "Mother" by The Police
★ (1984) "AC/DC" from Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical Starlight Express
★ (1984) "Overkill", the theme song from ''The Bill'' (original mix)
★ (1986) "Ghost and the Black Hat" by The Go-Betweens
★ (1988) "Hello Radio" by They Might Be Giants
★ (1990) "(En) El Séptimo Día" by Soda Stereo
★ (1992) "By Demons Be Driven" by Pantera- album: Vulgar Display of Power
★ (1994) "Firedance" from Riverdance
★ (1994) "Dreaming In Metaphors" by Seal
★ (1995) "Kicking In The Water" by The Gandharvas
★ (1995) "Fireal" by Deftones
★ (1995) "Black Sun" by Siouxsie and the Banshees
★ (1995) "Hip Today" by Extreme
★ (1995) "Deadguy" by Ministry
★ (1995) "Good-N-Evil" by Traci Lords (from the album ''1000 Fires'')
★ (1996) "I Was Brought to My Senses" by Sting
★ (1997) "7/8" by Genesis
★ (1997) "Prairie Dog" by Laika
★ (1997) "Poor Gal" by Laika
★ (1997) "Blood + Bones (Moody Mix)" by Laika
★ (1998) "The Dreaming Tree" by Dave Matthews Band
★ (1998) "777" by Autechre
★ (1999) "A French Galleasse" by Rachel's
★ (1999) "Next 5 Minutes" by Steven Curtis Chapman
★ (1999) "Rendez-vous 6:02" by UK
★ (1999) "Lost And Found" by Camel(Rajaz)
★ (2000) "Aimum" by Bela Fleck & the Flecktones
★ (2000) "Sea Song" by Faraquet
★ (2000) "Maelk og Honning" [Tobias Trier Denmark
★ (2000) "Moccasin" by Laika
★ (2000) "Widows' Weed" by Laika
★ (2000) "Glory Cloud" by Laika
★ (2001) "Sempre Sim" by Jovino Santos Neto
★ (2003) "Zeal" by Plaid (band)
★ (2003) "Einstein-Rosen Bridge" and "Abomination Street" by Venetian Snares
★ (2003) "Ride" by Samuel Hazo
★ (2003) "The Opinionated Are So Opinionated" by Poison the Well
★ (2004) "Migration" and "Earthogrub" by Yak
★ (2004) "Malibalo" by Marilyn Mazur Partly in 6/8
★ (2005) "The Collector" by Nine Inch Nails – alternating bars of 6/8 and 7/8. could be considered one bar of 13/8.
★ (2006) "The Meaning of Love" by Joe Satriani
★ (2006) "Yakt" by [Yak]
★ (2007) "Suite 7 (Volume 8)" by Dynamic Monotone
Partially in 7/8★ (1957) 3rd movement of the Piano Concerto No. 2 by Shostakovich
★ (1964) "Anyone Who Had a Heart" by Burt Bacharach, sung by Dionne Warwick - 7/8 turnaround at the end of the bridge, as pointed out to Bacharach by Dionne Warwick.[3] However the song features "5/4, 4/4, to 7/8 and resolving on 5/8 in only eight bars" according to the All Music Guide.[4]
★ (1968) "Senhor F" by Os Mutantes- verses in 7/8
★ (1969) "My Human Gets Me Blues" by Captain Beefheart & the Magic Band (Don Van Vliet).[5]
★ (1970) "Devotion" by John McLaughlin
★ (1972) "Goodbye" by Chicago- two verses in the beginning and the instrumental after.
★ (1973) "The Cinema Show" by Genesis - the extended outro and keyboard solo.
★ (1973) "The Ocean" by Led Zeppelin 4/4 + 7/8 in the choruses (documented in several Led Zeppelin song books).
★ (1975) "Anthem" by Rush - introduction in 7/8, rest of song in 12/8.
★ (1976) "Chord Change" by Camel from Moonmadness - the first bars of the songs are in a very unsteady 7/8 metre.
★ (1977) "Mad Man Moon" by Genesis - piano solo section.
★ (1978) "Cygnus X-1 Book II: Hemispheres" by Rush- II. Apollo Bringer of Wisdom and III. Dionysus Bringer of Love, intros and main verses.
★ (1978) "Jocko Homo" by Devo – Verses and intro are in 7/8, chorus and bridge are in 4/4.
★ (1978) "La Villa Strangiato (An Exercise in Self-Indulgence)" by Rush – the entire "A Lerxst in Wonderland" section and the first 4 bars of the "Monsters" section.
★ (1979) "Animals" by Talking Heads
★ (1979) "Tattooed Love Boys" by The Pretenders - verses alternate between 7/8 and 4/4.
★ (1980) "Natural Science" by Rush – the "Hyperspace" section is in 7/8 (with the occasional 3/4 turnaround thrown in at the end of a phrase).
★ (1981) "Frame by Frame" by King Crimson - verse is in 7/8
★ (1981) "Tom Sawyer" by Rush - the instrumental break (not counting the 3/4 turnaround) and the closing.
★ (1982) "Subdivisions" by Rush - intro and verses in 7/8 and 4/4.
★ (1982) "Golden Brown" by The Stranglers - 6/8 but the instrumental bridges add an extra beat in every other measure, making 7/8.
★ (1984) "Three of a Perfect Pair" by King Crimson - choruses and solo are in 7/8, verses in 6/8.
★ (1984) "Warning" by Queensrÿche – the fast part of the guitar solo.
★ (1984) "Distant Early Warning" by Rush – a few short parts in 7/8 throughout the song, plus sections of 5/8 + 7/8.
★ (1986) ""Alexander the Great"" by Iron Maiden – instrumental part in the middle of the song.
★ (1986) "Piece By Piece" by Slayer - verses.
★ (1986) "The Man Who Sailed Around His Soul" by XTC - verses.
★ (1988) "You Enjoy Myself" by Phish - many passages in 7/4 or 7/8 throughout the song.
★ (1988) "Golgi Apparatus" by Phish - first part of instrumental section alternates between 7/8 and 4/4.
★ (1989) "91 Steps" by Erasure (7 bars of 7/8 then one bar of 3/8)
★ (1990) "Carnage in the Temple of the Damned" by Deicide – the short, abrupt, quirky blast beat changes in the song from straight 4/4 mid-tempo playing is in 7/8.
★ (1992) "Them Bones" by Alice in Chains - chorus and part of guitar solo is in 4/4.
★ (1992) "Malpractice" by Faith No More - variously in 7/8 and 4/4.
★ (1992) "Architecture Of Aggression" by Megadeth - bridge.
★ (1993) "Lost Machine" by Voivod
★ (1993) "Saint Augustine in Hell" by Sting
★ (1993) "Love Is Stronger Than Justice (The Munificent Seven)" by Sting - verse only. [1]
★ (1994) "The Day I Tried to Live" by Soundgarden - verse and much of chorus alternate as one measure of 7/8 and one of 4/4.
★ (1994) "March of the Pigs" by Nine Inch Nails - verse and intro varies from 7/8 and 4/4.
★ (1994) "I'm Broken" by Pantera - verses
★ (1995) "Bury Me In Smoke" by Down - intro alternates between two bars of 4/4 and 4/4 + 7/8
★ (1995) "Bro Dependent" by Lagwagon is 7/8 and 4/4.
★ (1995) "Die To Live" by Steve Vai - alternates between 7/4 (or 7/8?) and 4/4.
★ (1996) "That, That Is" by Yes - contains several sections of 7/8.
★ (1997) "Mindfield" by Tidal Wave - midsection including guitar solo
★ (1997) "A Fall Thru the Ground" by John Frusciante - in 7/8 until 2:03, where it switches to 4/4.
★ (1997) "Paranoid Android" by Radiohead - has several four-measure sections consisting of three measures in 7/8 followed by one of 4/4.
★ (1997) "Venus Man Trap" by Veruca Salt
★ (1997) "Waltz in 7/8" by Yanni - starts in Alla Breve (Cut) Time and The goes to 7/8.
★ (1997) "The Accolade" by Symphony X - several 7/8 sections throughout.
★ (1997) "Providence" by Godspeed You! Black Emperor - The movement "Dead Metheny" is in 7/8, roughly 2:45 to 10:51 on the cd version.
★ (1998) "Bad Religion" by Godsmack - end of the song.
★ (1998) "Spark" by Tori Amos, 6/8 and 7/8 verses
★ (1999) "Closing In" by The Living End - riff from 1:00 to 1:24
★ (1999) "Infinity Machine" by I Mother Earth
★ (1999) "Better World" by Toto
★ (2000) "Negative Space" by Spineshank
★ (2001) "Rise n' Shine (Epic Doobie Nightmare #1)" by Estradasphere, during the section where the right speaker cuts in and out.
★ (2002) "And All That Could Have Been" by Nine Inch Nails - verses.
★ (2002) "Seven-Eight" by Funky Rx - entire song.
★ (2002) "Deliverance" by Opeth - intro part.
★ (2002) "Carbon" by Tori Amos - 6/8 7/8 verses.
★ (2002) "Motherfucker=Redeemer (Part Two)" by Godspeed You! Black Emperor – the first recognizable beat up until around 7:16 on the cd version is in 7/8.
★ (2003) "Gravity" by A Perfect Circle - most of the song, with the ending written in 8/8.
★ (2002) "Shrimp.SNG" by Sphere3 - various sections
★ (2003) "Streetlights, Empty Wells" by Anatomy of a Ghost - 1st verse and part of middle.
★ (2003) "Fireproof" by Pillar - the bridge contains one measure of 7/8 at the end.
★ (2003) "Massive Bereavement" by Oceansize
★ (2004) "Chewbacca Wookie" by Bryan Pardo - Into the Freylakh
★ (2004) "Earth City" by Martin O'Donnell (from the Halo Original Soundtrack) - the melody alternates each measure from 6/8 to 7/8.
★ (2004) "The Bitter End" by Sum 41
★ (2005) "It's Not Me" by 3 Doors Down - bridge.
★ (2005) "A Classic Arts Showcase" by ...And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead- album: Worlds Apart - beginning and ending in 7/8, middle in 4/4.
★ (2005) "Farting With a Walkman On" by Bloodhound Gang - last measures.
★ (2005) "Believe" by Journey - switches to 4/4 later.
★ (2005) "Fight For All The Wrong Reasons" by Nickelback - breakdown.
★ (2005) "Lately" by David Gray - verse and instrumental.
★ (2005) "Event Horizon Escape" by Periphery - verses and bridge.
★ (2005) "General Grievous" from the Star Wars Episode III soundtrack by John Williams - includes several noticeable phrases featuring 7/8 and alternation between 3/4 and 9/8.
★ (2005) "Avenue X" by Jonathan Newman - several brief phrases scattered throughout piece.
★ (2006) "Oboe Schuhe Overture" by Pomme De Chien - sections in 7/8 time.
★ (2006) "Intension" by Tool
★ (2006) "Slow Cheetah" by Red Hot Chili Peppers - final instrumental section.
★ (2006) "Giraffe Food" by Redrick Sultan - verses.
★ (2006) "This is Not a Love Song" by Dawn Xiana Moon - intro and verses.
★ (2006) "Petslenen" by Pomme De Chien - short sections switch from 7/8 to 4/4.
★ (2006) "Unmarked Graves" by Misery Index
★ (2006) "Degradation" by Flatline - chorus is 7/8 7/8 7/8 8/8 while solo is 8/8 7/8.
★ (2007) "Child of the City" by Clutch
★ (2007) "Era Vulgaris" by Queens of the Stone Age - Middle 8
★ (2007) "Bird In a Cage" by Dynamic Monotone - last measure of last bridge
★ (?) "Riding on the Wind" by Guo Wenjing - first and last 3 to 4 minutes in 7/8 (2+3+2 and 3+2+2) as well as occasional phrases in 5/8.
hohun a écrit:Pourquoi "depuis" 1973 ? L'argument du temps ne s'applique pas en ce sens qu'on n'était pas nés en 73 et qu'on a pu entendre ce genre de rythme avant de découvrir Money avec des morceaux à la fois plus vieux et plus récents.
Parceque Money est parue dans l'album Dark Side of the Moon, des Pink Floyd, en 1973.
Non, sérieux ?
hohun a écrit:blabla excuses plates arguments timides
Mentalité de perdant. Again.
T'es rageux que je t'aie pourri ton troll la première fois alors tu essaies de me le ressortir à toutes les sauces ?
TroyMcLure a écrit:Sinon je viens d'acheter ça :
http://www.montaz.com/catalogue-img/img … /98126.jpg
Il est beau.
magnifique. Quel litrage ? Poids ?
J'ai eu quelques mauvais retours sur les sacs Millet mais j'avoue que le design l'emporte parfois'ça porte un nom le fétichisme de l'équipement de montagne ?
75 litres, le poids je sais plus. C'est pas du sac d'alpinisme c'est plus pour le voyage/trek mou d'la bite.
Mais ce soir je dors tout contre lui.
7/4
''septuple meter''
★ (1886) Piano Trio no. 3 in C minor, Op. 101, by Johannes Brahms - this movement is actually notated as a pattern of 3/4 +2/4 + 2/4 bars.
★ (1949) Part 1: Section B: Variation 10 - Più Mosso, from Leonard Bernstein's Second Symphony ''(The Age of Anxiety)'', 4/4+3/4
★ (1951) Prelude No 14 in E flat minor, from ''24 Preludes and Fugues'', Op.87, by Shostakovich
★ (1962) "Three's A Crowd" by Dave Brubeck
★ (1968) "The Legend Of The Golden Arches" by Frank Zappa - 7/4, phrased as 3/8, 4/8, 3/8, 4/8.
★ (1968) "A Pound For A Brown On The Bus" by Frank Zappa - it's practically a sped up "Legend of the Golden Arches", in a faster 7/4.
★ (1969) Theme from ''Room 222'' by Jerry Goldsmith
★ (1970) "Atropos" by Emerson, Lake & Palmer
★ (1970) "Oh No" by Frank Zappa - 4/4 + 3/4
★ (1971) "Money" by Pink Floyd
★ (1971) "Love To Love You" by Caravan
★ (1972) "Dawn" by Mahavishnu Orchestra
★ (1973) "Hope" by Mahavishnu Orchestra
★ (1973) "Trilogy: The Sunlit Path/La Mere De La Mer/Tomorrow Story Not The Same" by Mahavishnu Orchestra, also included on the 1999 release of the Lost Trident Sessions.
★ (1973) "Cool Jerk" as covered by Todd Rundgren
★ (1974) "Aire" by Chicago
★ (1974) "Lion Tamer" by Stephen Schwartz (from the musical ''The Magic Show'')
★ (1974) "Mysterious Traveller" by Weather Report
★ (1974) "Inca Roads" by Frank Zappa - besides changing meter many times, one interlude is in 7/16.
★ (1975) "Lucky Seven" by Chris Squire
★ (1975) "Be Happy" by Mahavishnu Orchestra
★ (1976) "Lazy Lightning" by Grateful Dead
★ (1976) "Solsbury Hill" by Peter Gabriel
★ (1976) "Supplication" by Grateful Dead
★ (1976) "Sophie" by Jeff Beck
★ (1977) "Estimated Prophet" by Grateful Dead[1]
★ (1979) "Desire And The Comforter" by John McLaughlin
★ (1979) "To Go Off And Things" by Cardiacs
★ (1980) "Take It or Leave It" by Madness
★ (1983) "Seventh Heaven" by L. Subramaniam
★ (1983) "Cinema" by Yes - except for sections in 3/4.
★ (1987) "Straight To My Heart" by Sting
★ (1989) "Have You Heard" by Pat Metheny Group - head is primarily in 7/4 with changes into 5/4 and 3/4 back and forth and a 4/4 solo section.
★ (1993) "Neglect" by Crossed Out
★ (1994) "Just a Working Girl" by Moonshake
★ (1995) "Year of the Parrot" by Primus
★ (1995) "Right Hand Man" by Joan Osborne
★ (1996) "Dark Matter" by Porcupine Tree
★ (1996) "Motoroller Scalatron" by Stereolab
★ (1996) "Superstar" by Soda Stereo
★ (1997) "Rickets" by Deftones
★ (1997) "Seven Sisters" by John McLaughlin
★ (1997) "Circlesong One" by Bobby Mcferrin
★ (1998) "Queen of All Ears" by The Lounge Lizards
★ (1999) "Spider in the Snow" by The Dismemberment Plan: album Emergency & I
★ (1999) "Stay Home" by American Football
★ (2000) "Flood" by Boris (first movement)
★ (2000) "Renhölder" by A Perfect Circle: album Mer de Noms
★ (2000) "XQuiQ" by Estradasphere
★ (2000) "Big Exit" by PJ Harvey
★ (2002) "Invitation to a Suicide" by John Zorn
★ (2002) "Solitary Shell" by Dream Theater (intro/verses)
★ (2003) "The Closest Thing to Crazy" by Katie Melua
★ (2003) "March", "Shadows", "Independence" by Ring,Cicada
★ (2003) "She's Got Your Eyes" by +/-
★ (2003) "Mekapses Yitonisa" by Estradasphere
★ (2004) "Life's Just Too Short Little Ndugu" by Moneen - has 5/4 measures during verses and interlude.
★ (2004) "Hecate Pose" by Love Outside Andromeda
★ (2004) "Veefun" by Eu
★ (2004) "Moonglow" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Blackout" by Amusement Parks on Fire
★ (2005) "The Inborn Mechanics" by Coprofago
★ (2005) "7/4 (Shoreline)" by Broken Social Scene
★ (2005) "We're All Thieves" by Circa Survive
★ (2005) "Starship Groove" by Animusic
★ (2005) "Szerencsétlen" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Öngyilkos Vasárnap" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Hajnal" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Második Galamb" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Szamár Madár" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Kétsarkú Mozgalom" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Aanguish" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Choprite" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Des Plaines" by Venetian Snares - phrased as 5/8 + 5/8 + 4/8.
★ (2005) "Sinthasomphone" by Venetian Snares - phrased as 6/8 + 4/8 + 4/8.
★ (2005) "Szycag" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Dear Mister Supercomputer" by Sufjan Stevens - the chorus counts it out: ''One, two, three, four, five, six, seven/All computers go to heaven''
★ (2006) "Swindon" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Pwntendo" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Vache" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Plunging Hornets" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Tache" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Laps in Seven" by Sam Bush
★ (2006) "Frictional Nevada" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Duffy" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Cabbage" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Hospitality" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Leap Year" by +/-
★ (2006) "Senseless" by Theatre of Tragedy
★ (2006) "This Mess" by Hundred Reasons
★ (2006) "(5-2)+4" by the Staboola McPet Quintet
Partially in 7/4★ (1856) "Dante" Symphony by Franz Liszt - a section in the first movement.
★ (1895) Around this time, Alexander Scriabin started introducing 7/4 time into minor motifs, then into themes and phrases, and often played against 3/4, 3/8, 4/4, 5/4 or 6/8 in the other hand. There are hundreds of examples.
★ (1910) "The Firebird" by Igor Stravinsky - ending section.
★ (1936) ''Tanz'' from "Carmina Burana" by Carl Orff.
★ (1963) "Ring of Fire" by Johnny Cash - trumpet section plays 3/4 + 4/4 sections.
★ (1965) "Chichester Psalms" by Leonard Bernstein - First Movement.
★ (1967) "Comin' Back to Me" by Jefferson Airplane - each section where Marty Balin sings "I saw you...".
★ (1967) "All You Need Is Love" by The Beatles - verse in 7/4, chorus in 4/4.
★ (1967) "Strawberry Fields Forever" by The Beatles - The "strawberry fields forever" parts are in 7/4 preceded by a 2/4 bar.
★ (1970) "Uncle John's Band" by The Grateful Dead - instrumental section in 7/4.
★ (1970) "Perpetual Change" by Yes - an instrumental section is in 7/4.
★ (1972) "Roundabout" by Yes - contrapuntal vocal section at end is in 7/4.
★ (1972) "Soul Love" by David Bowie - verses.
★ (1973) "The Battle of Epping Forest" by Genesis - introduction and verse in 7/4.
★ (1973) "The Cinema Show" by Genesis - extended keyboard solo in 7/4.
★ (1973) "Money" by Pink Floyd. Predominantly in 7/4. The guitar solo section is in 4/4, as David Gilmour felt it would be too difficult in simple septuple meter. Some may argue the song is (primarily) in 21/8 time, as it has a swing triplet feel.
★ (1973) "The Ancient" by Yes - an instrumental section is in 7/4.
★ (1974) "Don't Eat the Yellow Snow" by Frank Zappa - all but the "Watch out where the huskies go" interpolation which is in 4/4.
★ (1974) "Money Money" by Grateful Dead - much is in 7/4 but also alternates to 4/4 and 6/4.
★ (1975) "All the World" by Kansas - 7/4 section in instrumental break in middle of song.
★ (1975) "Have a Good Time" by Paul Simon – - verses in 7/4, chorus in 4/4.
★ (1975) "Jive Talkin'" by Bee Gees - instrumental break in 7/4 (3/4 + 4/4).
★ (1975) "By-Tor and the Snow Dog" by Rush - the "7/4 War Furor" subsection of the "Battle" section.
★ (1975) "Down Home Town" by Electric Light Orchestra - verses.
★ (1976) "Go To Hell" by Alice Cooper - verse
★ (1977) "A Farewell to Kings" by Rush - section in beginning and end of song (4/4 + 3/4).
★ (1977) "Barracuda" by Heart - Outro in 7/4.
★ (1977) "Xanadu" by Rush - intro (after volume swells) is in 7/4.
★ (1977) "Fooling Yourself (The Angry Young Man)" by Styx - the keyboard solo in the middle of the song. (Note: there are also two measures of 5/8 in the song's closing sequence).
★ (1978) "Curfew" by The Stranglers - verses.
★ (1978) "Accidentally Like A Martyr" by Warren Zevon - the piano bridge.
★ (1978) "La Villa Strangiato (An Exercise in Self-Indulgence)" by Rush - "A Lerxst In Wonderland" section is in 7/4.
★ (1978) "In the Dead of Night" by UK - 1st and 3rd sections in 7/4, 2nd section ("By the Light of Day") in 5/4.
★ (1978) "How Much I Feel" by Ambrosia - first part of bridge section in 7/4 (3/4 + 4/4), rest of song in 4/4.
★ (1979) "Heart of Glass" by Blondie - the instrumental break, later changes to 4/4.
★ (1980) "The Wait" by The Pretenders - verses only, the rest is in 4/4.
★ (1980) "The Spirit of Radio" by Rush - first part of middle instrumental section is 7/4 (4/4 + 3/4), every fourth measure of the 7/4 section is 2 bars of 4/4.
★ (1981) "Wired For Sound" by Cliff Richard - the chorus works out into 7/4.
★ (1981) "Little Girls" by Oingo Boingo - verses.
★ (1981) "Limelight" by Rush - intro and verses (4/4 + 3/4).
★ (1981) "Red Barchetta" by Rush - guitar solo and short instrumental section before final verse (4/4 + 3/4).
★ (1981) "Diary of a Madman" by Ozzy Osbourne - verses in 7/4.
★ (1982) "I Love Rock N' Roll" by Joan Jett - measure of 7/4 (4/4 + 3/4) in the intro, several measures in the last chorus of the song.
★ (1982) "Afraid of Love" by Toto - verses in 7/4.
★ (1982) "Read About It" by Midnight Oil - part of the intro is in 7/4.
★ (1983) "Our Song" by Yes - intro theme in 7/4, used a few times throughout the song.
★ (1983) "Faster Than the Speed of Night" by Bonnie Tyler - short 7/4 sections in the verses.
★ (1984) "Building the Perfect Beast" by Don Henley - a few bars here and there are in 4/4, which heightens the feeling of unevenness in the time signature.
★ (1985) "Addicted to Love" by Robert Palmer - the intro drum solo is 7/4 while the rest of the song is in 4/4.
★ (1985) "Marathon" by Rush – bridge in half time feel 7/4.
★ (1987) "Time Stand Still" by Rush – -intro in 7/4, guitar/bass/"ooh" vocal interlude in 7/4 .
★ (1988) "Blackened" by Metallica – the main/bridge riff is 7/4, the verse is in 6/4.
★ (1988) "Waiting For 22" by Queensrÿche – in 7/4 but changes to 4/4 later.
★ (1989) "Superconductor" by Rush – intro & verses.
★ (1990) "Got The Time" by Anthrax
★ (1990) "Best I Can" by Queensrÿche – bridge, instrumental break, and fade-out.
★ (1990) "Resistance" by Queensrÿche – intro, played as 3+2+2.
★ (1990) "Carnage in the Temple of the Damned" by Deicide – the section preceding the scream of the song title, and where Glen Benton delivers a sort of death-growl rap if you will, is in 7/4.
★ (1991) "Caress" by Drive Like Jehu - main verses.
★ (1991) "Beeswax" by Nirvana – chorus
★ (1991) "Breadcrumb Trail" by Slint - beginning segment.
★ (1991) "Obstruction" by Living Sacrifice - intro and bridge in 7/4, rest is in 4/4.
★ (1991) "Outshined" by Soundgarden – verse and instrumentals
★ (1991) "In Lonesome Dove" by Garth Brooks – verses are mostly in 7/4.
★ (1991) "Small Town Saturday Night" by Hal Ketchum – verses
★ (1993) "4°" by Tool – intro and chorus.
★ (1993) "Awake and Nervous" by IQ; intro and chorus.
★ (1993) "Jack's Obsession" by Danny Elfman from The Nightmare Before Christmas
★ (1994) "Yes" by Manic Street Preachers – alternates between 7/8 and 8/8 in verses
★ (1994) "Riverdance" by Bill Whelan
★ (1994) "Damaged" by Queensrÿche – bridge.
★ (1994) "Spoonman" by Soundgarden
★ (1994) "Night Is Fallin' in My Heart" by Diamond Rio - intro and portion of chorus feature bars of 7/4
★ (1995) "If I Can't Have You" by Eve's Plum
★ (1995) "Wattershed" by Foo Fighters – bridge.
★ (1995) "Buy Me a Pony" by Spiderbait – also contains 6/4 and 4/4.
★ (1996) "Desperately Wanting" by Better Than Ezra – 4 measures of 7/4 during bridge.
★ (1996) "Forty Six & 2" by Tool – two bars in the intro, drum solo, and majority of ending .
★ (1996) "Legions of the Betrayed" by Quo Vadis – ends in 7/4.
★ (1996) "Politics, Religion, and Her" by Sammy Kershaw – verses.
★ (1996) "A Life of Arctic Sounds" by Modest Mouse – second verse is in 7/4
★ (1997) "Post Modern Sleaze" by Sneaker Pimps
★ (1997) "The Divine Wings of Tragedy" by Symphony X
★ (1997) "Out of the Ashes" by Symphony X – intro guitar riff and pre-choruses are in 7/4.
★ (1997) "Elephant Riders" by Clutch – verse is in 4/4, prechorus is in 9/4, chorus is in 7/4.
★ (1997) "Down in a Ditch" by Joe Diffie - portion of chorus is in 7/4
★ (1998) "Comin' Home" by HUM – verse in 7/4, chorus in 4/4, intro & bridge in 6/4.
★ (1998) "Against" by Sepultura
★ (1998) "Goin' Home" by Toto
★ (1999) "Make Yourself" by Incubus
★ (1999) "Wrong Way" by Creed
★ (1999) "Down with the Sickness" by Disturbed – bridge.
★ (1999) "The Death of Passion" by Nevermore – the end is in 7/4 .
★ (1999) "Running Board" by The Dillinger Escape Plan has a section in 7/4.
★ (1999) "Othello" by Chicago Underground Trio
★ (2000) "If Credit's What Matters I'll Take Credit" by Hot Snakes from the album ''Automatic Midnight''
★ (2000) "Communion and The Oracle" by Symphony X - instrumental pre-verses/pre-choruses and chorus section in 7/4
★ (2001) "Automatic" by The Dismemberment Plan – album: Change – all but chorus in 7/4.
★ (2001) "Airborne" by Jaga Jazzist from the album "A Livingroom Hush"; first part is in 6/8, the remainder of the song is in 7/4.
★ (2001) "Push the Hand" by Toadies – verse is three measures of 7/4, followed by one measure of 8/4.
★ (2001) "Carne Voodoo" by Rocket From The Crypt – opening.
★ (2001) "Ticks and Leeches" by Tool – The majority of the song is in 7/4, with occasional switches to 4/4 (or 8/4)
★ (2001) "The Shape" by Slipknot – from Iowa.
★ (2002) "The Monkey Versus the Robot" by Piebald – verses in 7/4, chorus in 6/4 and the breakdown in 4/4.
★ (2002) "Moodswings" by My Vitriol – instrumental break at beginning and end.
★ (2002) "A good example of arbitrary presumption" by Sphere3 – main verse sections
★ (2002) "The Sound of Muzak" by Porcupine Tree – verse and instrumental.
★ (2002) "Wedding Nails" by Porcupine Tree – contains a measure of 7/4 at 1:41.
★ (2002) "Times Like These" by Foo Fighters – instrumental bridges only.
★ (2002) "King Of Terrors" by Symphony X – intro alternates between 7/4 and 8/4; verse alternates between 7/4 and 6/4.
★ (2003) "1010011010" by Cog – contains sections in 9/4, 6/8 and 4/4.
★ (2003) "Inertiatic ESP" by The Mars Volta – bridge.
★ (2003) "Panic Attack" by Finger Eleven – verses.
★ (2003) "Ride" by Samuel Hazo – features a large 7/4 section, along with many sections with varied and polyrhythmic meters.
★ (2003) "Hardball" by Estradasphere – has much variation between 4/4 and 7/4.
★ (2003) "2+2=5" by Radiohead – begins in 7/4 time and then switches to 4/4 1 minute and 22 seconds into the song (right after the words "two & two always makes five").
★ (2003) "This Dying Soul" by Dream Theater - instrumental bridge before final guitar solo
★ (2003)"I Won't See You Tonight p.2" by Avenged Sevenfold – the riff behind the guitar solo is in 7/4.
★ (2004) "A Canon" by Regina Spektor – first line. of pre-chorusish part features a bar in 7/4 ("I always knew it was coming this way...")
★ (2004) "Builder" by Gavin Castleton.
★ (2004) "Consequences David, You'll Meet Your Fate in the Styx" by Fear Before the March of Flames – contains parts in 3/4.
★ (2004) "Fuck Me for Free" by Recover – the verse is in 7/4.
★ (2004) "Little Thoughts" by Bloc Party – ending in 7/4.
★ (2004) "Blackmail the Universe" by Megadeth
★ (2004) "Sunrise" by Norah Jones – bridge only.
★ (2004) "Sacred Sound" by IQ - intro.
★ (2004) "Two Sides" by After Forever – beginning section, repeated later in song.
★ (2004) "Through Square Eyes" by After Forever – section about 4 minutes into the song.
★ (2004) "Hey! Is That a Ninja Up There?" by Minus the Bear – intro in 7/4, verses in 4/4, chorus in 7/4 and the bridge in 6/4.
★ (2004) "About to Rage" by Gov't Mule – verses in 7/4; chorus is 4/4, 4/4, 4/4, 3/4 played twice; most of solo section in 8/4 counted 2+3+3.
★ (2004) "Seven" by Necrophagist
★ (2004) "Yawn, Yawn, Yawn" by Les Savy Fav – verses.
★ (2005) "Protecting Me" by Aly & AJ
★ (2005) "Michio's Death Drive" by Minus the Bear – section in 7/4.
★ (2005) "Between the End and Where We Lie" by Thrice – can also be expressed in 7/8 and 9/8 combination; chorus is 7/4 + 2 measures 4/4.
★ (2005) "So Called Friend" by Porcupine Tree [2]
★ (2005) "Going to Peterborough" by Carpetburn - middle section played in 7/4.
★ (2005) "Deadwing" by Porcupine Tree
★ (2005) "That's Where It Is" by Carrie Underwood
★ (2005) "Wanderlust" by R.E.M. - chorus partially 7/4
★ (2006) "Detonation" by Trivium 7/4 in the intro to the song. Verses have 4/4, 2/4, 4/4 structure. Rest of song is 4/4.
★ (2006) "Inefficiencity" by Dan Webb
★ (2006) "Crazy People" by Dynamic Monotone - every other measure in instrumental break
★ (2006) "Laps In Seven" by Sam Bush
★ (2006) "The Allegory of Benjamin Franklin" by Pomme De Chien – heavy sections in 7/4 or 4+3.
★ (2006) "Brighter than a Thousand Suns" by Iron Maiden
★ (2006) "Bees" by The Tunguska Event - between second chorus and solo.
★ (2006) "Flathead" by The Fratellis – chant section.
★ (2006) "Attack of the 10 Octave Marimba" by the Lawless Percussion & Jazz Ensemble.
★ (2006) "Mudlark" by Kill Your Ex – most of the song is in 7/4.
★ (2006) "Fadeout" by +/-
★ (2006) "Gone" by Daughtry
★ (2006) "Jerry Likes My Corn" by Scott Frankel (music) and Michael Korie (lyrics) from the musical Grey Gardens
★ (2006) "Just Might Have Her Radio On" by Trent Tomlinson
★ (2007) "A Different World" by Bucky Covington - verse
★ (2007) "Most Girls" by Lea - bridge
★ (2007) "Fine Mattress" by Wruice Deuce
★ (2007) "222" by Paul McCartney
★ (2007) "Red Fox" by Tomahawk
7/8''septuple meter, usually 2+2+3''
★ (?) "Inspiration" by Jan de Haan for concert band - end section alternates between 4/4, 2/4, and 3/2
★ (1854) "Faust" Symphony by Franz Liszt (original version)
★ (1915) "Pantomime", from ''El amor brujo'', by Manuel de Falla
★ (1961) "Unsquare Dance" by Dave Brubeck
★ (1967) "Who's the Thief" by Andrew Lloyd Webber from Joseph And The Amazing Technicolour Dreamcoat
★ (1968) "Market Song" by Pentangle from the album Sweet Child
★ (1970) "The Temple" by Andrew Lloyd Webber from Jesus Christ Superstar
★ (1970) "Working Class Hero" by John Lennon
★ (1971) "Rubylove" by Cat Stevens, from the album Teaser and the Firecat, in 3+2+2, the typical Greek kalamatianos rhythm, with a verse in Greek.
★ (1971) "The Fish (''Schindleria Praematurus'')" by Yes (''Fragile'')
★ (1974) "Back in NYC" by Genesis - 7/8 with a few bars of 6/8 scattered throughout
★ (1975) "Migration" by Camel
★ (1976) "Dance on a Volcano" by Genesis
★ (1977) "Slava!" by Leonard Bernstein
★ (1977) "Beneath The Earth" by Alphonse Mouzon & Larry Coryell
★ (1975) "Aurora, Pt. 2" by Jean-Luc Ponty
★ (1980s) "Marching Season", "Keys to Imagination", "Within Attraction", "Santorini," and "Waltz in 7/8" by Yanni
★ (1983) "Tower Hill" by Clannad. In 7/8 throughout.
★ (1983) "Mother" by The Police
★ (1984) "AC/DC" from Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical Starlight Express
★ (1984) "Overkill", the theme song from ''The Bill'' (original mix)
★ (1986) "Ghost and the Black Hat" by The Go-Betweens
★ (1988) "Hello Radio" by They Might Be Giants
★ (1990) "(En) El Séptimo Día" by Soda Stereo
★ (1992) "By Demons Be Driven" by Pantera- album: Vulgar Display of Power
★ (1994) "Firedance" from Riverdance
★ (1994) "Dreaming In Metaphors" by Seal
★ (1995) "Kicking In The Water" by The Gandharvas
★ (1995) "Fireal" by Deftones
★ (1995) "Black Sun" by Siouxsie and the Banshees
★ (1995) "Hip Today" by Extreme
★ (1995) "Deadguy" by Ministry
★ (1995) "Good-N-Evil" by Traci Lords (from the album ''1000 Fires'')
★ (1996) "I Was Brought to My Senses" by Sting
★ (1997) "7/8" by Genesis
★ (1997) "Prairie Dog" by Laika
★ (1997) "Poor Gal" by Laika
★ (1997) "Blood + Bones (Moody Mix)" by Laika
★ (1998) "The Dreaming Tree" by Dave Matthews Band
★ (1998) "777" by Autechre
★ (1999) "A French Galleasse" by Rachel's
★ (1999) "Next 5 Minutes" by Steven Curtis Chapman
★ (1999) "Rendez-vous 6:02" by UK
★ (1999) "Lost And Found" by Camel(Rajaz)
★ (2000) "Aimum" by Bela Fleck & the Flecktones
★ (2000) "Sea Song" by Faraquet
★ (2000) "Maelk og Honning" [Tobias Trier Denmark
★ (2000) "Moccasin" by Laika
★ (2000) "Widows' Weed" by Laika
★ (2000) "Glory Cloud" by Laika
★ (2001) "Sempre Sim" by Jovino Santos Neto
★ (2003) "Zeal" by Plaid (band)
★ (2003) "Einstein-Rosen Bridge" and "Abomination Street" by Venetian Snares
★ (2003) "Ride" by Samuel Hazo
★ (2003) "The Opinionated Are So Opinionated" by Poison the Well
★ (2004) "Migration" and "Earthogrub" by Yak
★ (2004) "Malibalo" by Marilyn Mazur Partly in 6/8
★ (2005) "The Collector" by Nine Inch Nails – alternating bars of 6/8 and 7/8. could be considered one bar of 13/8.
★ (2006) "The Meaning of Love" by Joe Satriani
★ (2006) "Yakt" by [Yak]
★ (2007) "Suite 7 (Volume 8)" by Dynamic Monotone
Partially in 7/8★ (1957) 3rd movement of the Piano Concerto No. 2 by Shostakovich
★ (1964) "Anyone Who Had a Heart" by Burt Bacharach, sung by Dionne Warwick - 7/8 turnaround at the end of the bridge, as pointed out to Bacharach by Dionne Warwick.[3] However the song features "5/4, 4/4, to 7/8 and resolving on 5/8 in only eight bars" according to the All Music Guide.[4]
★ (1968) "Senhor F" by Os Mutantes- verses in 7/8
★ (1969) "My Human Gets Me Blues" by Captain Beefheart & the Magic Band (Don Van Vliet).[5]
★ (1970) "Devotion" by John McLaughlin
★ (1972) "Goodbye" by Chicago- two verses in the beginning and the instrumental after.
★ (1973) "The Cinema Show" by Genesis - the extended outro and keyboard solo.
★ (1973) "The Ocean" by Led Zeppelin 4/4 + 7/8 in the choruses (documented in several Led Zeppelin song books).
★ (1975) "Anthem" by Rush - introduction in 7/8, rest of song in 12/8.
★ (1976) "Chord Change" by Camel from Moonmadness - the first bars of the songs are in a very unsteady 7/8 metre.
★ (1977) "Mad Man Moon" by Genesis - piano solo section.
★ (1978) "Cygnus X-1 Book II: Hemispheres" by Rush- II. Apollo Bringer of Wisdom and III. Dionysus Bringer of Love, intros and main verses.
★ (1978) "Jocko Homo" by Devo – Verses and intro are in 7/8, chorus and bridge are in 4/4.
★ (1978) "La Villa Strangiato (An Exercise in Self-Indulgence)" by Rush – the entire "A Lerxst in Wonderland" section and the first 4 bars of the "Monsters" section.
★ (1979) "Animals" by Talking Heads
★ (1979) "Tattooed Love Boys" by The Pretenders - verses alternate between 7/8 and 4/4.
★ (1980) "Natural Science" by Rush – the "Hyperspace" section is in 7/8 (with the occasional 3/4 turnaround thrown in at the end of a phrase).
★ (1981) "Frame by Frame" by King Crimson - verse is in 7/8
★ (1981) "Tom Sawyer" by Rush - the instrumental break (not counting the 3/4 turnaround) and the closing.
★ (1982) "Subdivisions" by Rush - intro and verses in 7/8 and 4/4.
★ (1982) "Golden Brown" by The Stranglers - 6/8 but the instrumental bridges add an extra beat in every other measure, making 7/8.
★ (1984) "Three of a Perfect Pair" by King Crimson - choruses and solo are in 7/8, verses in 6/8.
★ (1984) "Warning" by Queensrÿche – the fast part of the guitar solo.
★ (1984) "Distant Early Warning" by Rush – a few short parts in 7/8 throughout the song, plus sections of 5/8 + 7/8.
★ (1986) ""Alexander the Great"" by Iron Maiden – instrumental part in the middle of the song.
★ (1986) "Piece By Piece" by Slayer - verses.
★ (1986) "The Man Who Sailed Around His Soul" by XTC - verses.
★ (1988) "You Enjoy Myself" by Phish - many passages in 7/4 or 7/8 throughout the song.
★ (1988) "Golgi Apparatus" by Phish - first part of instrumental section alternates between 7/8 and 4/4.
★ (1989) "91 Steps" by Erasure (7 bars of 7/8 then one bar of 3/8)
★ (1990) "Carnage in the Temple of the Damned" by Deicide – the short, abrupt, quirky blast beat changes in the song from straight 4/4 mid-tempo playing is in 7/8.
★ (1992) "Them Bones" by Alice in Chains - chorus and part of guitar solo is in 4/4.
★ (1992) "Malpractice" by Faith No More - variously in 7/8 and 4/4.
★ (1992) "Architecture Of Aggression" by Megadeth - bridge.
★ (1993) "Lost Machine" by Voivod
★ (1993) "Saint Augustine in Hell" by Sting
★ (1993) "Love Is Stronger Than Justice (The Munificent Seven)" by Sting - verse only. [1]
★ (1994) "The Day I Tried to Live" by Soundgarden - verse and much of chorus alternate as one measure of 7/8 and one of 4/4.
★ (1994) "March of the Pigs" by Nine Inch Nails - verse and intro varies from 7/8 and 4/4.
★ (1994) "I'm Broken" by Pantera - verses
★ (1995) "Bury Me In Smoke" by Down - intro alternates between two bars of 4/4 and 4/4 + 7/8
★ (1995) "Bro Dependent" by Lagwagon is 7/8 and 4/4.
★ (1995) "Die To Live" by Steve Vai - alternates between 7/4 (or 7/8?) and 4/4.
★ (1996) "That, That Is" by Yes - contains several sections of 7/8.
★ (1997) "Mindfield" by Tidal Wave - midsection including guitar solo
★ (1997) "A Fall Thru the Ground" by John Frusciante - in 7/8 until 2:03, where it switches to 4/4.
★ (1997) "Paranoid Android" by Radiohead - has several four-measure sections consisting of three measures in 7/8 followed by one of 4/4.
★ (1997) "Venus Man Trap" by Veruca Salt
★ (1997) "Waltz in 7/8" by Yanni - starts in Alla Breve (Cut) Time and The goes to 7/8.
★ (1997) "The Accolade" by Symphony X - several 7/8 sections throughout.
★ (1997) "Providence" by Godspeed You! Black Emperor - The movement "Dead Metheny" is in 7/8, roughly 2:45 to 10:51 on the cd version.
★ (1998) "Bad Religion" by Godsmack - end of the song.
★ (1998) "Spark" by Tori Amos, 6/8 and 7/8 verses
★ (1999) "Closing In" by The Living End - riff from 1:00 to 1:24
★ (1999) "Infinity Machine" by I Mother Earth
★ (1999) "Better World" by Toto
★ (2000) "Negative Space" by Spineshank
★ (2001) "Rise n' Shine (Epic Doobie Nightmare #1)" by Estradasphere, during the section where the right speaker cuts in and out.
★ (2002) "And All That Could Have Been" by Nine Inch Nails - verses.
★ (2002) "Seven-Eight" by Funky Rx - entire song.
★ (2002) "Deliverance" by Opeth - intro part.
★ (2002) "Carbon" by Tori Amos - 6/8 7/8 verses.
★ (2002) "Motherfucker=Redeemer (Part Two)" by Godspeed You! Black Emperor – the first recognizable beat up until around 7:16 on the cd version is in 7/8.
★ (2003) "Gravity" by A Perfect Circle - most of the song, with the ending written in 8/8.
★ (2002) "Shrimp.SNG" by Sphere3 - various sections
★ (2003) "Streetlights, Empty Wells" by Anatomy of a Ghost - 1st verse and part of middle.
★ (2003) "Fireproof" by Pillar - the bridge contains one measure of 7/8 at the end.
★ (2003) "Massive Bereavement" by Oceansize
★ (2004) "Chewbacca Wookie" by Bryan Pardo - Into the Freylakh
★ (2004) "Earth City" by Martin O'Donnell (from the Halo Original Soundtrack) - the melody alternates each measure from 6/8 to 7/8.
★ (2004) "The Bitter End" by Sum 41
★ (2005) "It's Not Me" by 3 Doors Down - bridge.
★ (2005) "A Classic Arts Showcase" by ...And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead- album: Worlds Apart - beginning and ending in 7/8, middle in 4/4.
★ (2005) "Farting With a Walkman On" by Bloodhound Gang - last measures.
★ (2005) "Believe" by Journey - switches to 4/4 later.
★ (2005) "Fight For All The Wrong Reasons" by Nickelback - breakdown.
★ (2005) "Lately" by David Gray - verse and instrumental.
★ (2005) "Event Horizon Escape" by Periphery - verses and bridge.
★ (2005) "General Grievous" from the Star Wars Episode III soundtrack by John Williams - includes several noticeable phrases featuring 7/8 and alternation between 3/4 and 9/8.
★ (2005) "Avenue X" by Jonathan Newman - several brief phrases scattered throughout piece.
★ (2006) "Oboe Schuhe Overture" by Pomme De Chien - sections in 7/8 time.
★ (2006) "Intension" by Tool
★ (2006) "Slow Cheetah" by Red Hot Chili Peppers - final instrumental section.
★ (2006) "Giraffe Food" by Redrick Sultan - verses.
★ (2006) "This is Not a Love Song" by Dawn Xiana Moon - intro and verses.
★ (2006) "Petslenen" by Pomme De Chien - short sections switch from 7/8 to 4/4.
★ (2006) "Unmarked Graves" by Misery Index
★ (2006) "Degradation" by Flatline - chorus is 7/8 7/8 7/8 8/8 while solo is 8/8 7/8.
★ (2007) "Child of the City" by Clutch
★ (2007) "Era Vulgaris" by Queens of the Stone Age - Middle 8
★ (2007) "Bird In a Cage" by Dynamic Monotone - last measure of last bridge
★ (?) "Riding on the Wind" by Guo Wenjing - first and last 3 to 4 minutes in 7/8 (2+3+2 and 3+2+2) as well as occasional phrases in 5/8.
Il pourrait y en avoir 1000 de plus dans ta liste (néanmoins intéressante) que ça resterait malgré tout marginal à côté de la centaine de milliers de chansons basées sur des rythmes à quatre temps. (cela dit je suis étonné d'en voir autant que je connais par cœur et pour lesquelles je n'avais jamais percuté)
Je pourrais te proposer de nous concilier sur un truc un peu vague du style "les chansons sur des rythmes à sept temps sont peu communes" parce que finalement on joue sur les mots, mais non, je vais pas dire que j'ai tort alors que je suis persuadé d'avoir raison et que tu t'acharnes simplement pour ne pas passer pour un branque qui a voulu se la raconter érudit. Quand je prends la définition du mot atypique je vois "Qui diffère du type normal, habituel." et je persiste à dire qu'un rythme à sept temps ça diffère du standard et traditionnel quatre temps, dans l'absolu, et encore plus par rapport au reste de la discographie des Pink Floyd.
Parlons plutôt sac de rando parce que ça c'est vraiment ce que les gens veulent entendre.
hohun a écrit:7/4
''septuple meter''
★ (1886) Piano Trio no. 3 in C minor, Op. 101, by Johannes Brahms - this movement is actually notated as a pattern of 3/4 +2/4 + 2/4 bars.
★ (1949) Part 1: Section B: Variation 10 - Più Mosso, from Leonard Bernstein's Second Symphony ''(The Age of Anxiety)'', 4/4+3/4
★ (1951) Prelude No 14 in E flat minor, from ''24 Preludes and Fugues'', Op.87, by Shostakovich
★ (1962) "Three's A Crowd" by Dave Brubeck
★ (1968) "The Legend Of The Golden Arches" by Frank Zappa - 7/4, phrased as 3/8, 4/8, 3/8, 4/8.
★ (1968) "A Pound For A Brown On The Bus" by Frank Zappa - it's practically a sped up "Legend of the Golden Arches", in a faster 7/4.
★ (1969) Theme from ''Room 222'' by Jerry Goldsmith
★ (1970) "Atropos" by Emerson, Lake & Palmer
★ (1970) "Oh No" by Frank Zappa - 4/4 + 3/4
★ (1971) "Money" by Pink Floyd
★ (1971) "Love To Love You" by Caravan
★ (1972) "Dawn" by Mahavishnu Orchestra
★ (1973) "Hope" by Mahavishnu Orchestra
★ (1973) "Trilogy: The Sunlit Path/La Mere De La Mer/Tomorrow Story Not The Same" by Mahavishnu Orchestra, also included on the 1999 release of the Lost Trident Sessions.
★ (1973) "Cool Jerk" as covered by Todd Rundgren
★ (1974) "Aire" by Chicago
★ (1974) "Lion Tamer" by Stephen Schwartz (from the musical ''The Magic Show'')
★ (1974) "Mysterious Traveller" by Weather Report
★ (1974) "Inca Roads" by Frank Zappa - besides changing meter many times, one interlude is in 7/16.
★ (1975) "Lucky Seven" by Chris Squire
★ (1975) "Be Happy" by Mahavishnu Orchestra
★ (1976) "Lazy Lightning" by Grateful Dead
★ (1976) "Solsbury Hill" by Peter Gabriel
★ (1976) "Supplication" by Grateful Dead
★ (1976) "Sophie" by Jeff Beck
★ (1977) "Estimated Prophet" by Grateful Dead[1]
★ (1979) "Desire And The Comforter" by John McLaughlin
★ (1979) "To Go Off And Things" by Cardiacs
★ (1980) "Take It or Leave It" by Madness
★ (1983) "Seventh Heaven" by L. Subramaniam
★ (1983) "Cinema" by Yes - except for sections in 3/4.
★ (1987) "Straight To My Heart" by Sting
★ (1989) "Have You Heard" by Pat Metheny Group - head is primarily in 7/4 with changes into 5/4 and 3/4 back and forth and a 4/4 solo section.
★ (1993) "Neglect" by Crossed Out
★ (1994) "Just a Working Girl" by Moonshake
★ (1995) "Year of the Parrot" by Primus
★ (1995) "Right Hand Man" by Joan Osborne
★ (1996) "Dark Matter" by Porcupine Tree
★ (1996) "Motoroller Scalatron" by Stereolab
★ (1996) "Superstar" by Soda Stereo
★ (1997) "Rickets" by Deftones
★ (1997) "Seven Sisters" by John McLaughlin
★ (1997) "Circlesong One" by Bobby Mcferrin
★ (1998) "Queen of All Ears" by The Lounge Lizards
★ (1999) "Spider in the Snow" by The Dismemberment Plan: album Emergency & I
★ (1999) "Stay Home" by American Football
★ (2000) "Flood" by Boris (first movement)
★ (2000) "Renhölder" by A Perfect Circle: album Mer de Noms
★ (2000) "XQuiQ" by Estradasphere
★ (2000) "Big Exit" by PJ Harvey
★ (2002) "Invitation to a Suicide" by John Zorn
★ (2002) "Solitary Shell" by Dream Theater (intro/verses)
★ (2003) "The Closest Thing to Crazy" by Katie Melua
★ (2003) "March", "Shadows", "Independence" by Ring,Cicada
★ (2003) "She's Got Your Eyes" by +/-
★ (2003) "Mekapses Yitonisa" by Estradasphere
★ (2004) "Life's Just Too Short Little Ndugu" by Moneen - has 5/4 measures during verses and interlude.
★ (2004) "Hecate Pose" by Love Outside Andromeda
★ (2004) "Veefun" by Eu
★ (2004) "Moonglow" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Blackout" by Amusement Parks on Fire
★ (2005) "The Inborn Mechanics" by Coprofago
★ (2005) "7/4 (Shoreline)" by Broken Social Scene
★ (2005) "We're All Thieves" by Circa Survive
★ (2005) "Starship Groove" by Animusic
★ (2005) "Szerencsétlen" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Öngyilkos Vasárnap" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Hajnal" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Második Galamb" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Szamár Madár" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Kétsarkú Mozgalom" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Aanguish" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Choprite" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Des Plaines" by Venetian Snares - phrased as 5/8 + 5/8 + 4/8.
★ (2005) "Sinthasomphone" by Venetian Snares - phrased as 6/8 + 4/8 + 4/8.
★ (2005) "Szycag" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Dear Mister Supercomputer" by Sufjan Stevens - the chorus counts it out: ''One, two, three, four, five, six, seven/All computers go to heaven''
★ (2006) "Swindon" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Pwntendo" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Vache" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Plunging Hornets" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Tache" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Laps in Seven" by Sam Bush
★ (2006) "Frictional Nevada" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Duffy" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Cabbage" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Hospitality" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Leap Year" by +/-
★ (2006) "Senseless" by Theatre of Tragedy
★ (2006) "This Mess" by Hundred Reasons
★ (2006) "(5-2)+4" by the Staboola McPet Quintet
Partially in 7/4★ (1856) "Dante" Symphony by Franz Liszt - a section in the first movement.
★ (1895) Around this time, Alexander Scriabin started introducing 7/4 time into minor motifs, then into themes and phrases, and often played against 3/4, 3/8, 4/4, 5/4 or 6/8 in the other hand. There are hundreds of examples.
★ (1910) "The Firebird" by Igor Stravinsky - ending section.
★ (1936) ''Tanz'' from "Carmina Burana" by Carl Orff.
★ (1963) "Ring of Fire" by Johnny Cash - trumpet section plays 3/4 + 4/4 sections.
★ (1965) "Chichester Psalms" by Leonard Bernstein - First Movement.
★ (1967) "Comin' Back to Me" by Jefferson Airplane - each section where Marty Balin sings "I saw you...".
★ (1967) "All You Need Is Love" by The Beatles - verse in 7/4, chorus in 4/4.
★ (1967) "Strawberry Fields Forever" by The Beatles - The "strawberry fields forever" parts are in 7/4 preceded by a 2/4 bar.
★ (1970) "Uncle John's Band" by The Grateful Dead - instrumental section in 7/4.
★ (1970) "Perpetual Change" by Yes - an instrumental section is in 7/4.
★ (1972) "Roundabout" by Yes - contrapuntal vocal section at end is in 7/4.
★ (1972) "Soul Love" by David Bowie - verses.
★ (1973) "The Battle of Epping Forest" by Genesis - introduction and verse in 7/4.
★ (1973) "The Cinema Show" by Genesis - extended keyboard solo in 7/4.
★ (1973) "Money" by Pink Floyd. Predominantly in 7/4. The guitar solo section is in 4/4, as David Gilmour felt it would be too difficult in simple septuple meter. Some may argue the song is (primarily) in 21/8 time, as it has a swing triplet feel.
★ (1973) "The Ancient" by Yes - an instrumental section is in 7/4.
★ (1974) "Don't Eat the Yellow Snow" by Frank Zappa - all but the "Watch out where the huskies go" interpolation which is in 4/4.
★ (1974) "Money Money" by Grateful Dead - much is in 7/4 but also alternates to 4/4 and 6/4.
★ (1975) "All the World" by Kansas - 7/4 section in instrumental break in middle of song.
★ (1975) "Have a Good Time" by Paul Simon – - verses in 7/4, chorus in 4/4.
★ (1975) "Jive Talkin'" by Bee Gees - instrumental break in 7/4 (3/4 + 4/4).
★ (1975) "By-Tor and the Snow Dog" by Rush - the "7/4 War Furor" subsection of the "Battle" section.
★ (1975) "Down Home Town" by Electric Light Orchestra - verses.
★ (1976) "Go To Hell" by Alice Cooper - verse
★ (1977) "A Farewell to Kings" by Rush - section in beginning and end of song (4/4 + 3/4).
★ (1977) "Barracuda" by Heart - Outro in 7/4.
★ (1977) "Xanadu" by Rush - intro (after volume swells) is in 7/4.
★ (1977) "Fooling Yourself (The Angry Young Man)" by Styx - the keyboard solo in the middle of the song. (Note: there are also two measures of 5/8 in the song's closing sequence).
★ (1978) "Curfew" by The Stranglers - verses.
★ (1978) "Accidentally Like A Martyr" by Warren Zevon - the piano bridge.
★ (1978) "La Villa Strangiato (An Exercise in Self-Indulgence)" by Rush - "A Lerxst In Wonderland" section is in 7/4.
★ (1978) "In the Dead of Night" by UK - 1st and 3rd sections in 7/4, 2nd section ("By the Light of Day") in 5/4.
★ (1978) "How Much I Feel" by Ambrosia - first part of bridge section in 7/4 (3/4 + 4/4), rest of song in 4/4.
★ (1979) "Heart of Glass" by Blondie - the instrumental break, later changes to 4/4.
★ (1980) "The Wait" by The Pretenders - verses only, the rest is in 4/4.
★ (1980) "The Spirit of Radio" by Rush - first part of middle instrumental section is 7/4 (4/4 + 3/4), every fourth measure of the 7/4 section is 2 bars of 4/4.
★ (1981) "Wired For Sound" by Cliff Richard - the chorus works out into 7/4.
★ (1981) "Little Girls" by Oingo Boingo - verses.
★ (1981) "Limelight" by Rush - intro and verses (4/4 + 3/4).
★ (1981) "Red Barchetta" by Rush - guitar solo and short instrumental section before final verse (4/4 + 3/4).
★ (1981) "Diary of a Madman" by Ozzy Osbourne - verses in 7/4.
★ (1982) "I Love Rock N' Roll" by Joan Jett - measure of 7/4 (4/4 + 3/4) in the intro, several measures in the last chorus of the song.
★ (1982) "Afraid of Love" by Toto - verses in 7/4.
★ (1982) "Read About It" by Midnight Oil - part of the intro is in 7/4.
★ (1983) "Our Song" by Yes - intro theme in 7/4, used a few times throughout the song.
★ (1983) "Faster Than the Speed of Night" by Bonnie Tyler - short 7/4 sections in the verses.
★ (1984) "Building the Perfect Beast" by Don Henley - a few bars here and there are in 4/4, which heightens the feeling of unevenness in the time signature.
★ (1985) "Addicted to Love" by Robert Palmer - the intro drum solo is 7/4 while the rest of the song is in 4/4.
★ (1985) "Marathon" by Rush – bridge in half time feel 7/4.
★ (1987) "Time Stand Still" by Rush – -intro in 7/4, guitar/bass/"ooh" vocal interlude in 7/4 .
★ (1988) "Blackened" by Metallica – the main/bridge riff is 7/4, the verse is in 6/4.
★ (1988) "Waiting For 22" by Queensrÿche – in 7/4 but changes to 4/4 later.
★ (1989) "Superconductor" by Rush – intro & verses.
★ (1990) "Got The Time" by Anthrax
★ (1990) "Best I Can" by Queensrÿche – bridge, instrumental break, and fade-out.
★ (1990) "Resistance" by Queensrÿche – intro, played as 3+2+2.
★ (1990) "Carnage in the Temple of the Damned" by Deicide – the section preceding the scream of the song title, and where Glen Benton delivers a sort of death-growl rap if you will, is in 7/4.
★ (1991) "Caress" by Drive Like Jehu - main verses.
★ (1991) "Beeswax" by Nirvana – chorus
★ (1991) "Breadcrumb Trail" by Slint - beginning segment.
★ (1991) "Obstruction" by Living Sacrifice - intro and bridge in 7/4, rest is in 4/4.
★ (1991) "Outshined" by Soundgarden – verse and instrumentals
★ (1991) "In Lonesome Dove" by Garth Brooks – verses are mostly in 7/4.
★ (1991) "Small Town Saturday Night" by Hal Ketchum – verses
★ (1993) "4°" by Tool – intro and chorus.
★ (1993) "Awake and Nervous" by IQ; intro and chorus.
★ (1993) "Jack's Obsession" by Danny Elfman from The Nightmare Before Christmas
★ (1994) "Yes" by Manic Street Preachers – alternates between 7/8 and 8/8 in verses
★ (1994) "Riverdance" by Bill Whelan
★ (1994) "Damaged" by Queensrÿche – bridge.
★ (1994) "Spoonman" by Soundgarden
★ (1994) "Night Is Fallin' in My Heart" by Diamond Rio - intro and portion of chorus feature bars of 7/4
★ (1995) "If I Can't Have You" by Eve's Plum
★ (1995) "Wattershed" by Foo Fighters – bridge.
★ (1995) "Buy Me a Pony" by Spiderbait – also contains 6/4 and 4/4.
★ (1996) "Desperately Wanting" by Better Than Ezra – 4 measures of 7/4 during bridge.
★ (1996) "Forty Six & 2" by Tool – two bars in the intro, drum solo, and majority of ending .
★ (1996) "Legions of the Betrayed" by Quo Vadis – ends in 7/4.
★ (1996) "Politics, Religion, and Her" by Sammy Kershaw – verses.
★ (1996) "A Life of Arctic Sounds" by Modest Mouse – second verse is in 7/4
★ (1997) "Post Modern Sleaze" by Sneaker Pimps
★ (1997) "The Divine Wings of Tragedy" by Symphony X
★ (1997) "Out of the Ashes" by Symphony X – intro guitar riff and pre-choruses are in 7/4.
★ (1997) "Elephant Riders" by Clutch – verse is in 4/4, prechorus is in 9/4, chorus is in 7/4.
★ (1997) "Down in a Ditch" by Joe Diffie - portion of chorus is in 7/4
★ (1998) "Comin' Home" by HUM – verse in 7/4, chorus in 4/4, intro & bridge in 6/4.
★ (1998) "Against" by Sepultura
★ (1998) "Goin' Home" by Toto
★ (1999) "Make Yourself" by Incubus
★ (1999) "Wrong Way" by Creed
★ (1999) "Down with the Sickness" by Disturbed – bridge.
★ (1999) "The Death of Passion" by Nevermore – the end is in 7/4 .
★ (1999) "Running Board" by The Dillinger Escape Plan has a section in 7/4.
★ (1999) "Othello" by Chicago Underground Trio
★ (2000) "If Credit's What Matters I'll Take Credit" by Hot Snakes from the album ''Automatic Midnight''
★ (2000) "Communion and The Oracle" by Symphony X - instrumental pre-verses/pre-choruses and chorus section in 7/4
★ (2001) "Automatic" by The Dismemberment Plan – album: Change – all but chorus in 7/4.
★ (2001) "Airborne" by Jaga Jazzist from the album "A Livingroom Hush"; first part is in 6/8, the remainder of the song is in 7/4.
★ (2001) "Push the Hand" by Toadies – verse is three measures of 7/4, followed by one measure of 8/4.
★ (2001) "Carne Voodoo" by Rocket From The Crypt – opening.
★ (2001) "Ticks and Leeches" by Tool – The majority of the song is in 7/4, with occasional switches to 4/4 (or 8/4)
★ (2001) "The Shape" by Slipknot – from Iowa.
★ (2002) "The Monkey Versus the Robot" by Piebald – verses in 7/4, chorus in 6/4 and the breakdown in 4/4.
★ (2002) "Moodswings" by My Vitriol – instrumental break at beginning and end.
★ (2002) "A good example of arbitrary presumption" by Sphere3 – main verse sections
★ (2002) "The Sound of Muzak" by Porcupine Tree – verse and instrumental.
★ (2002) "Wedding Nails" by Porcupine Tree – contains a measure of 7/4 at 1:41.
★ (2002) "Times Like These" by Foo Fighters – instrumental bridges only.
★ (2002) "King Of Terrors" by Symphony X – intro alternates between 7/4 and 8/4; verse alternates between 7/4 and 6/4.
★ (2003) "1010011010" by Cog – contains sections in 9/4, 6/8 and 4/4.
★ (2003) "Inertiatic ESP" by The Mars Volta – bridge.
★ (2003) "Panic Attack" by Finger Eleven – verses.
★ (2003) "Ride" by Samuel Hazo – features a large 7/4 section, along with many sections with varied and polyrhythmic meters.
★ (2003) "Hardball" by Estradasphere – has much variation between 4/4 and 7/4.
★ (2003) "2+2=5" by Radiohead – begins in 7/4 time and then switches to 4/4 1 minute and 22 seconds into the song (right after the words "two & two always makes five").
★ (2003) "This Dying Soul" by Dream Theater - instrumental bridge before final guitar solo
★ (2003)"I Won't See You Tonight p.2" by Avenged Sevenfold – the riff behind the guitar solo is in 7/4.
★ (2004) "A Canon" by Regina Spektor – first line. of pre-chorusish part features a bar in 7/4 ("I always knew it was coming this way...")
★ (2004) "Builder" by Gavin Castleton.
★ (2004) "Consequences David, You'll Meet Your Fate in the Styx" by Fear Before the March of Flames – contains parts in 3/4.
★ (2004) "Fuck Me for Free" by Recover – the verse is in 7/4.
★ (2004) "Little Thoughts" by Bloc Party – ending in 7/4.
★ (2004) "Blackmail the Universe" by Megadeth
★ (2004) "Sunrise" by Norah Jones – bridge only.
★ (2004) "Sacred Sound" by IQ - intro.
★ (2004) "Two Sides" by After Forever – beginning section, repeated later in song.
★ (2004) "Through Square Eyes" by After Forever – section about 4 minutes into the song.
★ (2004) "Hey! Is That a Ninja Up There?" by Minus the Bear – intro in 7/4, verses in 4/4, chorus in 7/4 and the bridge in 6/4.
★ (2004) "About to Rage" by Gov't Mule – verses in 7/4; chorus is 4/4, 4/4, 4/4, 3/4 played twice; most of solo section in 8/4 counted 2+3+3.
★ (2004) "Seven" by Necrophagist
★ (2004) "Yawn, Yawn, Yawn" by Les Savy Fav – verses.
★ (2005) "Protecting Me" by Aly & AJ
★ (2005) "Michio's Death Drive" by Minus the Bear – section in 7/4.
★ (2005) "Between the End and Where We Lie" by Thrice – can also be expressed in 7/8 and 9/8 combination; chorus is 7/4 + 2 measures 4/4.
★ (2005) "So Called Friend" by Porcupine Tree [2]
★ (2005) "Going to Peterborough" by Carpetburn - middle section played in 7/4.
★ (2005) "Deadwing" by Porcupine Tree
★ (2005) "That's Where It Is" by Carrie Underwood
★ (2005) "Wanderlust" by R.E.M. - chorus partially 7/4
★ (2006) "Detonation" by Trivium 7/4 in the intro to the song. Verses have 4/4, 2/4, 4/4 structure. Rest of song is 4/4.
★ (2006) "Inefficiencity" by Dan Webb
★ (2006) "Crazy People" by Dynamic Monotone - every other measure in instrumental break
★ (2006) "Laps In Seven" by Sam Bush
★ (2006) "The Allegory of Benjamin Franklin" by Pomme De Chien – heavy sections in 7/4 or 4+3.
★ (2006) "Brighter than a Thousand Suns" by Iron Maiden
★ (2006) "Bees" by The Tunguska Event - between second chorus and solo.
★ (2006) "Flathead" by The Fratellis – chant section.
★ (2006) "Attack of the 10 Octave Marimba" by the Lawless Percussion & Jazz Ensemble.
★ (2006) "Mudlark" by Kill Your Ex – most of the song is in 7/4.
★ (2006) "Fadeout" by +/-
★ (2006) "Gone" by Daughtry
★ (2006) "Jerry Likes My Corn" by Scott Frankel (music) and Michael Korie (lyrics) from the musical Grey Gardens
★ (2006) "Just Might Have Her Radio On" by Trent Tomlinson
★ (2007) "A Different World" by Bucky Covington - verse
★ (2007) "Most Girls" by Lea - bridge
★ (2007) "Fine Mattress" by Wruice Deuce
★ (2007) "222" by Paul McCartney
★ (2007) "Red Fox" by Tomahawk
7/8''septuple meter, usually 2+2+3''
★ (?) "Inspiration" by Jan de Haan for concert band - end section alternates between 4/4, 2/4, and 3/2
★ (1854) "Faust" Symphony by Franz Liszt (original version)
★ (1915) "Pantomime", from ''El amor brujo'', by Manuel de Falla
★ (1961) "Unsquare Dance" by Dave Brubeck
★ (1967) "Who's the Thief" by Andrew Lloyd Webber from Joseph And The Amazing Technicolour Dreamcoat
★ (1968) "Market Song" by Pentangle from the album Sweet Child
★ (1970) "The Temple" by Andrew Lloyd Webber from Jesus Christ Superstar
★ (1970) "Working Class Hero" by John Lennon
★ (1971) "Rubylove" by Cat Stevens, from the album Teaser and the Firecat, in 3+2+2, the typical Greek kalamatianos rhythm, with a verse in Greek.
★ (1971) "The Fish (''Schindleria Praematurus'')" by Yes (''Fragile'')
★ (1974) "Back in NYC" by Genesis - 7/8 with a few bars of 6/8 scattered throughout
★ (1975) "Migration" by Camel
★ (1976) "Dance on a Volcano" by Genesis
★ (1977) "Slava!" by Leonard Bernstein
★ (1977) "Beneath The Earth" by Alphonse Mouzon & Larry Coryell
★ (1975) "Aurora, Pt. 2" by Jean-Luc Ponty
★ (1980s) "Marching Season", "Keys to Imagination", "Within Attraction", "Santorini," and "Waltz in 7/8" by Yanni
★ (1983) "Tower Hill" by Clannad. In 7/8 throughout.
★ (1983) "Mother" by The Police
★ (1984) "AC/DC" from Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical Starlight Express
★ (1984) "Overkill", the theme song from ''The Bill'' (original mix)
★ (1986) "Ghost and the Black Hat" by The Go-Betweens
★ (1988) "Hello Radio" by They Might Be Giants
★ (1990) "(En) El Séptimo Día" by Soda Stereo
★ (1992) "By Demons Be Driven" by Pantera- album: Vulgar Display of Power
★ (1994) "Firedance" from Riverdance
★ (1994) "Dreaming In Metaphors" by Seal
★ (1995) "Kicking In The Water" by The Gandharvas
★ (1995) "Fireal" by Deftones
★ (1995) "Black Sun" by Siouxsie and the Banshees
★ (1995) "Hip Today" by Extreme
★ (1995) "Deadguy" by Ministry
★ (1995) "Good-N-Evil" by Traci Lords (from the album ''1000 Fires'')
★ (1996) "I Was Brought to My Senses" by Sting
★ (1997) "7/8" by Genesis
★ (1997) "Prairie Dog" by Laika
★ (1997) "Poor Gal" by Laika
★ (1997) "Blood + Bones (Moody Mix)" by Laika
★ (1998) "The Dreaming Tree" by Dave Matthews Band
★ (1998) "777" by Autechre
★ (1999) "A French Galleasse" by Rachel's
★ (1999) "Next 5 Minutes" by Steven Curtis Chapman
★ (1999) "Rendez-vous 6:02" by UK
★ (1999) "Lost And Found" by Camel(Rajaz)
★ (2000) "Aimum" by Bela Fleck & the Flecktones
★ (2000) "Sea Song" by Faraquet
★ (2000) "Maelk og Honning" [Tobias Trier Denmark
★ (2000) "Moccasin" by Laika
★ (2000) "Widows' Weed" by Laika
★ (2000) "Glory Cloud" by Laika
★ (2001) "Sempre Sim" by Jovino Santos Neto
★ (2003) "Zeal" by Plaid (band)
★ (2003) "Einstein-Rosen Bridge" and "Abomination Street" by Venetian Snares
★ (2003) "Ride" by Samuel Hazo
★ (2003) "The Opinionated Are So Opinionated" by Poison the Well
★ (2004) "Migration" and "Earthogrub" by Yak
★ (2004) "Malibalo" by Marilyn Mazur Partly in 6/8
★ (2005) "The Collector" by Nine Inch Nails – alternating bars of 6/8 and 7/8. could be considered one bar of 13/8.
★ (2006) "The Meaning of Love" by Joe Satriani
★ (2006) "Yakt" by [Yak]
★ (2007) "Suite 7 (Volume 8)" by Dynamic Monotone
Partially in 7/8★ (1957) 3rd movement of the Piano Concerto No. 2 by Shostakovich
★ (1964) "Anyone Who Had a Heart" by Burt Bacharach, sung by Dionne Warwick - 7/8 turnaround at the end of the bridge, as pointed out to Bacharach by Dionne Warwick.[3] However the song features "5/4, 4/4, to 7/8 and resolving on 5/8 in only eight bars" according to the All Music Guide.[4]
★ (1968) "Senhor F" by Os Mutantes- verses in 7/8
★ (1969) "My Human Gets Me Blues" by Captain Beefheart & the Magic Band (Don Van Vliet).[5]
★ (1970) "Devotion" by John McLaughlin
★ (1972) "Goodbye" by Chicago- two verses in the beginning and the instrumental after.
★ (1973) "The Cinema Show" by Genesis - the extended outro and keyboard solo.
★ (1973) "The Ocean" by Led Zeppelin 4/4 + 7/8 in the choruses (documented in several Led Zeppelin song books).
★ (1975) "Anthem" by Rush - introduction in 7/8, rest of song in 12/8.
★ (1976) "Chord Change" by Camel from Moonmadness - the first bars of the songs are in a very unsteady 7/8 metre.
★ (1977) "Mad Man Moon" by Genesis - piano solo section.
★ (1978) "Cygnus X-1 Book II: Hemispheres" by Rush- II. Apollo Bringer of Wisdom and III. Dionysus Bringer of Love, intros and main verses.
★ (1978) "Jocko Homo" by Devo – Verses and intro are in 7/8, chorus and bridge are in 4/4.
★ (1978) "La Villa Strangiato (An Exercise in Self-Indulgence)" by Rush – the entire "A Lerxst in Wonderland" section and the first 4 bars of the "Monsters" section.
★ (1979) "Animals" by Talking Heads
★ (1979) "Tattooed Love Boys" by The Pretenders - verses alternate between 7/8 and 4/4.
★ (1980) "Natural Science" by Rush – the "Hyperspace" section is in 7/8 (with the occasional 3/4 turnaround thrown in at the end of a phrase).
★ (1981) "Frame by Frame" by King Crimson - verse is in 7/8
★ (1981) "Tom Sawyer" by Rush - the instrumental break (not counting the 3/4 turnaround) and the closing.
★ (1982) "Subdivisions" by Rush - intro and verses in 7/8 and 4/4.
★ (1982) "Golden Brown" by The Stranglers - 6/8 but the instrumental bridges add an extra beat in every other measure, making 7/8.
★ (1984) "Three of a Perfect Pair" by King Crimson - choruses and solo are in 7/8, verses in 6/8.
★ (1984) "Warning" by Queensrÿche – the fast part of the guitar solo.
★ (1984) "Distant Early Warning" by Rush – a few short parts in 7/8 throughout the song, plus sections of 5/8 + 7/8.
★ (1986) ""Alexander the Great"" by Iron Maiden – instrumental part in the middle of the song.
★ (1986) "Piece By Piece" by Slayer - verses.
★ (1986) "The Man Who Sailed Around His Soul" by XTC - verses.
★ (1988) "You Enjoy Myself" by Phish - many passages in 7/4 or 7/8 throughout the song.
★ (1988) "Golgi Apparatus" by Phish - first part of instrumental section alternates between 7/8 and 4/4.
★ (1989) "91 Steps" by Erasure (7 bars of 7/8 then one bar of 3/8)
★ (1990) "Carnage in the Temple of the Damned" by Deicide – the short, abrupt, quirky blast beat changes in the song from straight 4/4 mid-tempo playing is in 7/8.
★ (1992) "Them Bones" by Alice in Chains - chorus and part of guitar solo is in 4/4.
★ (1992) "Malpractice" by Faith No More - variously in 7/8 and 4/4.
★ (1992) "Architecture Of Aggression" by Megadeth - bridge.
★ (1993) "Lost Machine" by Voivod
★ (1993) "Saint Augustine in Hell" by Sting
★ (1993) "Love Is Stronger Than Justice (The Munificent Seven)" by Sting - verse only. [1]
★ (1994) "The Day I Tried to Live" by Soundgarden - verse and much of chorus alternate as one measure of 7/8 and one of 4/4.
★ (1994) "March of the Pigs" by Nine Inch Nails - verse and intro varies from 7/8 and 4/4.
★ (1994) "I'm Broken" by Pantera - verses
★ (1995) "Bury Me In Smoke" by Down - intro alternates between two bars of 4/4 and 4/4 + 7/8
★ (1995) "Bro Dependent" by Lagwagon is 7/8 and 4/4.
★ (1995) "Die To Live" by Steve Vai - alternates between 7/4 (or 7/8?) and 4/4.
★ (1996) "That, That Is" by Yes - contains several sections of 7/8.
★ (1997) "Mindfield" by Tidal Wave - midsection including guitar solo
★ (1997) "A Fall Thru the Ground" by John Frusciante - in 7/8 until 2:03, where it switches to 4/4.
★ (1997) "Paranoid Android" by Radiohead - has several four-measure sections consisting of three measures in 7/8 followed by one of 4/4.
★ (1997) "Venus Man Trap" by Veruca Salt
★ (1997) "Waltz in 7/8" by Yanni - starts in Alla Breve (Cut) Time and The goes to 7/8.
★ (1997) "The Accolade" by Symphony X - several 7/8 sections throughout.
★ (1997) "Providence" by Godspeed You! Black Emperor - The movement "Dead Metheny" is in 7/8, roughly 2:45 to 10:51 on the cd version.
★ (1998) "Bad Religion" by Godsmack - end of the song.
★ (1998) "Spark" by Tori Amos, 6/8 and 7/8 verses
★ (1999) "Closing In" by The Living End - riff from 1:00 to 1:24
★ (1999) "Infinity Machine" by I Mother Earth
★ (1999) "Better World" by Toto
★ (2000) "Negative Space" by Spineshank
★ (2001) "Rise n' Shine (Epic Doobie Nightmare #1)" by Estradasphere, during the section where the right speaker cuts in and out.
★ (2002) "And All That Could Have Been" by Nine Inch Nails - verses.
★ (2002) "Seven-Eight" by Funky Rx - entire song.
★ (2002) "Deliverance" by Opeth - intro part.
★ (2002) "Carbon" by Tori Amos - 6/8 7/8 verses.
★ (2002) "Motherfucker=Redeemer (Part Two)" by Godspeed You! Black Emperor – the first recognizable beat up until around 7:16 on the cd version is in 7/8.
★ (2003) "Gravity" by A Perfect Circle - most of the song, with the ending written in 8/8.
★ (2002) "Shrimp.SNG" by Sphere3 - various sections
★ (2003) "Streetlights, Empty Wells" by Anatomy of a Ghost - 1st verse and part of middle.
★ (2003) "Fireproof" by Pillar - the bridge contains one measure of 7/8 at the end.
★ (2003) "Massive Bereavement" by Oceansize
★ (2004) "Chewbacca Wookie" by Bryan Pardo - Into the Freylakh
★ (2004) "Earth City" by Martin O'Donnell (from the Halo Original Soundtrack) - the melody alternates each measure from 6/8 to 7/8.
★ (2004) "The Bitter End" by Sum 41
★ (2005) "It's Not Me" by 3 Doors Down - bridge.
★ (2005) "A Classic Arts Showcase" by ...And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead- album: Worlds Apart - beginning and ending in 7/8, middle in 4/4.
★ (2005) "Farting With a Walkman On" by Bloodhound Gang - last measures.
★ (2005) "Believe" by Journey - switches to 4/4 later.
★ (2005) "Fight For All The Wrong Reasons" by Nickelback - breakdown.
★ (2005) "Lately" by David Gray - verse and instrumental.
★ (2005) "Event Horizon Escape" by Periphery - verses and bridge.
★ (2005) "General Grievous" from the Star Wars Episode III soundtrack by John Williams - includes several noticeable phrases featuring 7/8 and alternation between 3/4 and 9/8.
★ (2005) "Avenue X" by Jonathan Newman - several brief phrases scattered throughout piece.
★ (2006) "Oboe Schuhe Overture" by Pomme De Chien - sections in 7/8 time.
★ (2006) "Intension" by Tool
★ (2006) "Slow Cheetah" by Red Hot Chili Peppers - final instrumental section.
★ (2006) "Giraffe Food" by Redrick Sultan - verses.
★ (2006) "This is Not a Love Song" by Dawn Xiana Moon - intro and verses.
★ (2006) "Petslenen" by Pomme De Chien - short sections switch from 7/8 to 4/4.
★ (2006) "Unmarked Graves" by Misery Index
★ (2006) "Degradation" by Flatline - chorus is 7/8 7/8 7/8 8/8 while solo is 8/8 7/8.
★ (2007) "Child of the City" by Clutch
★ (2007) "Era Vulgaris" by Queens of the Stone Age - Middle 8
★ (2007) "Bird In a Cage" by Dynamic Monotone - last measure of last bridge
★ (?) "Riding on the Wind" by Guo Wenjing - first and last 3 to 4 minutes in 7/8 (2+3+2 and 3+2+2) as well as occasional phrases in 5/8.
Il pourrait y en avoir 1000 de plus dans ta liste (néanmoins intéressante) que ça resterait malgré tout marginal à côté de la centaine de milliers de chansons basées sur des rythmes à quatre temps. (cela dit je suis étonné d'en voir autant que je connais par cœur et pour lesquelles je n'avais jamais percuté)
Je pourrais te proposer de nous concilier sur un truc un peu vague du style "les chansons sur des rythmes à sept temps sont peu communes" parce que finalement on joue sur les mots, mais non, je vais pas dire que j'ai tort alors que je suis persuadé d'avoir raison et que tu t'acharnes simplement pour ne pas passer pour un branque qui a voulu se la raconter érudit. Quand je prends la définition du mot atypique je vois "Qui diffère du type normal, habituel." et je persiste à dire qu'un rythme à sept temps ça diffère du standard et traditionnel quatre temps, dans l'absolu, et encore plus par rapport au reste de la discographie des Pink Floyd.
Parlons plutôt sac de rando parce que ça c'est vraiment ce que les gens veulent entendre.
Avec mille de plus, ça serait quand même plus pertinent je trouve.
Tu dis ça parce qu'on est pas sur la même gamme chromatique.
hohun a écrit:tldr
Il pourrait y en avoir 1000 de plus dans ta liste (néanmoins intéressante) que ça resterait malgré tout marginal à côté de la centaine de milliers de chansons basées sur des rythmes à quatre temps. (cela dit je suis étonné d'en voir autant que je connais par cœur et pour lesquelles je n'avais jamais percuté)
Je pourrais te proposer de nous concilier sur un truc un peu vague du style "les chansons sur des rythmes à sept temps sont peu communes" parce que finalement on joue sur les mots, mais non, je vais pas dire que j'ai tort alors que je suis persuadé d'avoir raison et que tu t'acharnes simplement pour ne pas passer pour un branque qui a voulu se la raconter érudit. Quand je prends la définition du mot atypique je vois "Qui diffère du type normal, habituel." et je persiste à dire qu'un rythme à sept temps ça diffère du standard et traditionnel quatre temps, dans l'absolu, et encore plus par rapport au reste de la discographie des Pink Floyd.
Parlons plutôt sac de rando parce que ça c'est vraiment ce que les gens veulent entendre.
La façon dont stany le disait me faisait penser qu'il le disait genre "rare", renforcé par le drop de lien wikipedia sans commentaire mettant bien l'accent sur le 7/4. Que le 4/4 soit la norme, je ne dis pas le contraire, c'est sur la nuance que je différais. Et me la jouer érudit, non, enfin, j'écoute énormément de musique, c'est un fait mais je n'y connais rien en technique, d'où le "profane" dans un post précédent. Pas besoin d'être initié au solfège ou je ne sais quoi pour savoir apprécier des rythmes différents.
Sinon les sacs de rando je déteste, je suis plus du genre à me balader nu et à communier avec la nature sur un bon rythme de musique de l'est 7/4 hérité de mes amis cocos.
Atypique c'est plus différent que rare , Connard.
Tu dis ça parce qu'on est pas sur la même gamme chromatique.
Ben moi, quand tu sors de la gamme dodécaphonique tempérée, mes oreilles elles y aiment pas trop. Après une dizaine de savarts, je craque. Alors imagine la vraie musique indienne traditionnelle, ça me fait le même effet que des billes tombant dans un seau d'acier.
Aenema a écrit:hohun a écrit:7/4
''septuple meter''
★ (1886) Piano Trio no. 3 in C minor, Op. 101, by Johannes Brahms - this movement is actually notated as a pattern of 3/4 +2/4 + 2/4 bars.
★ (1949) Part 1: Section B: Variation 10 - Più Mosso, from Leonard Bernstein's Second Symphony ''(The Age of Anxiety)'', 4/4+3/4
★ (1951) Prelude No 14 in E flat minor, from ''24 Preludes and Fugues'', Op.87, by Shostakovich
★ (1962) "Three's A Crowd" by Dave Brubeck
★ (1968) "The Legend Of The Golden Arches" by Frank Zappa - 7/4, phrased as 3/8, 4/8, 3/8, 4/8.
★ (1968) "A Pound For A Brown On The Bus" by Frank Zappa - it's practically a sped up "Legend of the Golden Arches", in a faster 7/4.
★ (1969) Theme from ''Room 222'' by Jerry Goldsmith
★ (1970) "Atropos" by Emerson, Lake & Palmer
★ (1970) "Oh No" by Frank Zappa - 4/4 + 3/4
★ (1971) "Money" by Pink Floyd
★ (1971) "Love To Love You" by Caravan
★ (1972) "Dawn" by Mahavishnu Orchestra
★ (1973) "Hope" by Mahavishnu Orchestra
★ (1973) "Trilogy: The Sunlit Path/La Mere De La Mer/Tomorrow Story Not The Same" by Mahavishnu Orchestra, also included on the 1999 release of the Lost Trident Sessions.
★ (1973) "Cool Jerk" as covered by Todd Rundgren
★ (1974) "Aire" by Chicago
★ (1974) "Lion Tamer" by Stephen Schwartz (from the musical ''The Magic Show'')
★ (1974) "Mysterious Traveller" by Weather Report
★ (1974) "Inca Roads" by Frank Zappa - besides changing meter many times, one interlude is in 7/16.
★ (1975) "Lucky Seven" by Chris Squire
★ (1975) "Be Happy" by Mahavishnu Orchestra
★ (1976) "Lazy Lightning" by Grateful Dead
★ (1976) "Solsbury Hill" by Peter Gabriel
★ (1976) "Supplication" by Grateful Dead
★ (1976) "Sophie" by Jeff Beck
★ (1977) "Estimated Prophet" by Grateful Dead[1]
★ (1979) "Desire And The Comforter" by John McLaughlin
★ (1979) "To Go Off And Things" by Cardiacs
★ (1980) "Take It or Leave It" by Madness
★ (1983) "Seventh Heaven" by L. Subramaniam
★ (1983) "Cinema" by Yes - except for sections in 3/4.
★ (1987) "Straight To My Heart" by Sting
★ (1989) "Have You Heard" by Pat Metheny Group - head is primarily in 7/4 with changes into 5/4 and 3/4 back and forth and a 4/4 solo section.
★ (1993) "Neglect" by Crossed Out
★ (1994) "Just a Working Girl" by Moonshake
★ (1995) "Year of the Parrot" by Primus
★ (1995) "Right Hand Man" by Joan Osborne
★ (1996) "Dark Matter" by Porcupine Tree
★ (1996) "Motoroller Scalatron" by Stereolab
★ (1996) "Superstar" by Soda Stereo
★ (1997) "Rickets" by Deftones
★ (1997) "Seven Sisters" by John McLaughlin
★ (1997) "Circlesong One" by Bobby Mcferrin
★ (1998) "Queen of All Ears" by The Lounge Lizards
★ (1999) "Spider in the Snow" by The Dismemberment Plan: album Emergency & I
★ (1999) "Stay Home" by American Football
★ (2000) "Flood" by Boris (first movement)
★ (2000) "Renhölder" by A Perfect Circle: album Mer de Noms
★ (2000) "XQuiQ" by Estradasphere
★ (2000) "Big Exit" by PJ Harvey
★ (2002) "Invitation to a Suicide" by John Zorn
★ (2002) "Solitary Shell" by Dream Theater (intro/verses)
★ (2003) "The Closest Thing to Crazy" by Katie Melua
★ (2003) "March", "Shadows", "Independence" by Ring,Cicada
★ (2003) "She's Got Your Eyes" by +/-
★ (2003) "Mekapses Yitonisa" by Estradasphere
★ (2004) "Life's Just Too Short Little Ndugu" by Moneen - has 5/4 measures during verses and interlude.
★ (2004) "Hecate Pose" by Love Outside Andromeda
★ (2004) "Veefun" by Eu
★ (2004) "Moonglow" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Blackout" by Amusement Parks on Fire
★ (2005) "The Inborn Mechanics" by Coprofago
★ (2005) "7/4 (Shoreline)" by Broken Social Scene
★ (2005) "We're All Thieves" by Circa Survive
★ (2005) "Starship Groove" by Animusic
★ (2005) "Szerencsétlen" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Öngyilkos Vasárnap" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Hajnal" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Második Galamb" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Szamár Madár" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Kétsarkú Mozgalom" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Aanguish" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Choprite" by Venetian Snares
★ (2005) "Des Plaines" by Venetian Snares - phrased as 5/8 + 5/8 + 4/8.
★ (2005) "Sinthasomphone" by Venetian Snares - phrased as 6/8 + 4/8 + 4/8.
★ (2005) "Szycag" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Dear Mister Supercomputer" by Sufjan Stevens - the chorus counts it out: ''One, two, three, four, five, six, seven/All computers go to heaven''
★ (2006) "Swindon" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Pwntendo" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Vache" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Plunging Hornets" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Tache" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Laps in Seven" by Sam Bush
★ (2006) "Frictional Nevada" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Duffy" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Cabbage" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Hospitality" by Venetian Snares
★ (2006) "Leap Year" by +/-
★ (2006) "Senseless" by Theatre of Tragedy
★ (2006) "This Mess" by Hundred Reasons
★ (2006) "(5-2)+4" by the Staboola McPet Quintet
Partially in 7/4★ (1856) "Dante" Symphony by Franz Liszt - a section in the first movement.
★ (1895) Around this time, Alexander Scriabin started introducing 7/4 time into minor motifs, then into themes and phrases, and often played against 3/4, 3/8, 4/4, 5/4 or 6/8 in the other hand. There are hundreds of examples.
★ (1910) "The Firebird" by Igor Stravinsky - ending section.
★ (1936) ''Tanz'' from "Carmina Burana" by Carl Orff.
★ (1963) "Ring of Fire" by Johnny Cash - trumpet section plays 3/4 + 4/4 sections.
★ (1965) "Chichester Psalms" by Leonard Bernstein - First Movement.
★ (1967) "Comin' Back to Me" by Jefferson Airplane - each section where Marty Balin sings "I saw you...".
★ (1967) "All You Need Is Love" by The Beatles - verse in 7/4, chorus in 4/4.
★ (1967) "Strawberry Fields Forever" by The Beatles - The "strawberry fields forever" parts are in 7/4 preceded by a 2/4 bar.
★ (1970) "Uncle John's Band" by The Grateful Dead - instrumental section in 7/4.
★ (1970) "Perpetual Change" by Yes - an instrumental section is in 7/4.
★ (1972) "Roundabout" by Yes - contrapuntal vocal section at end is in 7/4.
★ (1972) "Soul Love" by David Bowie - verses.
★ (1973) "The Battle of Epping Forest" by Genesis - introduction and verse in 7/4.
★ (1973) "The Cinema Show" by Genesis - extended keyboard solo in 7/4.
★ (1973) "Money" by Pink Floyd. Predominantly in 7/4. The guitar solo section is in 4/4, as David Gilmour felt it would be too difficult in simple septuple meter. Some may argue the song is (primarily) in 21/8 time, as it has a swing triplet feel.
★ (1973) "The Ancient" by Yes - an instrumental section is in 7/4.
★ (1974) "Don't Eat the Yellow Snow" by Frank Zappa - all but the "Watch out where the huskies go" interpolation which is in 4/4.
★ (1974) "Money Money" by Grateful Dead - much is in 7/4 but also alternates to 4/4 and 6/4.
★ (1975) "All the World" by Kansas - 7/4 section in instrumental break in middle of song.
★ (1975) "Have a Good Time" by Paul Simon – - verses in 7/4, chorus in 4/4.
★ (1975) "Jive Talkin'" by Bee Gees - instrumental break in 7/4 (3/4 + 4/4).
★ (1975) "By-Tor and the Snow Dog" by Rush - the "7/4 War Furor" subsection of the "Battle" section.
★ (1975) "Down Home Town" by Electric Light Orchestra - verses.
★ (1976) "Go To Hell" by Alice Cooper - verse
★ (1977) "A Farewell to Kings" by Rush - section in beginning and end of song (4/4 + 3/4).
★ (1977) "Barracuda" by Heart - Outro in 7/4.
★ (1977) "Xanadu" by Rush - intro (after volume swells) is in 7/4.
★ (1977) "Fooling Yourself (The Angry Young Man)" by Styx - the keyboard solo in the middle of the song. (Note: there are also two measures of 5/8 in the song's closing sequence).
★ (1978) "Curfew" by The Stranglers - verses.
★ (1978) "Accidentally Like A Martyr" by Warren Zevon - the piano bridge.
★ (1978) "La Villa Strangiato (An Exercise in Self-Indulgence)" by Rush - "A Lerxst In Wonderland" section is in 7/4.
★ (1978) "In the Dead of Night" by UK - 1st and 3rd sections in 7/4, 2nd section ("By the Light of Day") in 5/4.
★ (1978) "How Much I Feel" by Ambrosia - first part of bridge section in 7/4 (3/4 + 4/4), rest of song in 4/4.
★ (1979) "Heart of Glass" by Blondie - the instrumental break, later changes to 4/4.
★ (1980) "The Wait" by The Pretenders - verses only, the rest is in 4/4.
★ (1980) "The Spirit of Radio" by Rush - first part of middle instrumental section is 7/4 (4/4 + 3/4), every fourth measure of the 7/4 section is 2 bars of 4/4.
★ (1981) "Wired For Sound" by Cliff Richard - the chorus works out into 7/4.
★ (1981) "Little Girls" by Oingo Boingo - verses.
★ (1981) "Limelight" by Rush - intro and verses (4/4 + 3/4).
★ (1981) "Red Barchetta" by Rush - guitar solo and short instrumental section before final verse (4/4 + 3/4).
★ (1981) "Diary of a Madman" by Ozzy Osbourne - verses in 7/4.
★ (1982) "I Love Rock N' Roll" by Joan Jett - measure of 7/4 (4/4 + 3/4) in the intro, several measures in the last chorus of the song.
★ (1982) "Afraid of Love" by Toto - verses in 7/4.
★ (1982) "Read About It" by Midnight Oil - part of the intro is in 7/4.
★ (1983) "Our Song" by Yes - intro theme in 7/4, used a few times throughout the song.
★ (1983) "Faster Than the Speed of Night" by Bonnie Tyler - short 7/4 sections in the verses.
★ (1984) "Building the Perfect Beast" by Don Henley - a few bars here and there are in 4/4, which heightens the feeling of unevenness in the time signature.
★ (1985) "Addicted to Love" by Robert Palmer - the intro drum solo is 7/4 while the rest of the song is in 4/4.
★ (1985) "Marathon" by Rush – bridge in half time feel 7/4.
★ (1987) "Time Stand Still" by Rush – -intro in 7/4, guitar/bass/"ooh" vocal interlude in 7/4 .
★ (1988) "Blackened" by Metallica – the main/bridge riff is 7/4, the verse is in 6/4.
★ (1988) "Waiting For 22" by Queensrÿche – in 7/4 but changes to 4/4 later.
★ (1989) "Superconductor" by Rush – intro & verses.
★ (1990) "Got The Time" by Anthrax
★ (1990) "Best I Can" by Queensrÿche – bridge, instrumental break, and fade-out.
★ (1990) "Resistance" by Queensrÿche – intro, played as 3+2+2.
★ (1990) "Carnage in the Temple of the Damned" by Deicide – the section preceding the scream of the song title, and where Glen Benton delivers a sort of death-growl rap if you will, is in 7/4.
★ (1991) "Caress" by Drive Like Jehu - main verses.
★ (1991) "Beeswax" by Nirvana – chorus
★ (1991) "Breadcrumb Trail" by Slint - beginning segment.
★ (1991) "Obstruction" by Living Sacrifice - intro and bridge in 7/4, rest is in 4/4.
★ (1991) "Outshined" by Soundgarden – verse and instrumentals
★ (1991) "In Lonesome Dove" by Garth Brooks – verses are mostly in 7/4.
★ (1991) "Small Town Saturday Night" by Hal Ketchum – verses
★ (1993) "4°" by Tool – intro and chorus.
★ (1993) "Awake and Nervous" by IQ; intro and chorus.
★ (1993) "Jack's Obsession" by Danny Elfman from The Nightmare Before Christmas
★ (1994) "Yes" by Manic Street Preachers – alternates between 7/8 and 8/8 in verses
★ (1994) "Riverdance" by Bill Whelan
★ (1994) "Damaged" by Queensrÿche – bridge.
★ (1994) "Spoonman" by Soundgarden
★ (1994) "Night Is Fallin' in My Heart" by Diamond Rio - intro and portion of chorus feature bars of 7/4
★ (1995) "If I Can't Have You" by Eve's Plum
★ (1995) "Wattershed" by Foo Fighters – bridge.
★ (1995) "Buy Me a Pony" by Spiderbait – also contains 6/4 and 4/4.
★ (1996) "Desperately Wanting" by Better Than Ezra – 4 measures of 7/4 during bridge.
★ (1996) "Forty Six & 2" by Tool – two bars in the intro, drum solo, and majority of ending .
★ (1996) "Legions of the Betrayed" by Quo Vadis – ends in 7/4.
★ (1996) "Politics, Religion, and Her" by Sammy Kershaw – verses.
★ (1996) "A Life of Arctic Sounds" by Modest Mouse – second verse is in 7/4
★ (1997) "Post Modern Sleaze" by Sneaker Pimps
★ (1997) "The Divine Wings of Tragedy" by Symphony X
★ (1997) "Out of the Ashes" by Symphony X – intro guitar riff and pre-choruses are in 7/4.
★ (1997) "Elephant Riders" by Clutch – verse is in 4/4, prechorus is in 9/4, chorus is in 7/4.
★ (1997) "Down in a Ditch" by Joe Diffie - portion of chorus is in 7/4
★ (1998) "Comin' Home" by HUM – verse in 7/4, chorus in 4/4, intro & bridge in 6/4.
★ (1998) "Against" by Sepultura
★ (1998) "Goin' Home" by Toto
★ (1999) "Make Yourself" by Incubus
★ (1999) "Wrong Way" by Creed
★ (1999) "Down with the Sickness" by Disturbed – bridge.
★ (1999) "The Death of Passion" by Nevermore – the end is in 7/4 .
★ (1999) "Running Board" by The Dillinger Escape Plan has a section in 7/4.
★ (1999) "Othello" by Chicago Underground Trio
★ (2000) "If Credit's What Matters I'll Take Credit" by Hot Snakes from the album ''Automatic Midnight''
★ (2000) "Communion and The Oracle" by Symphony X - instrumental pre-verses/pre-choruses and chorus section in 7/4
★ (2001) "Automatic" by The Dismemberment Plan – album: Change – all but chorus in 7/4.
★ (2001) "Airborne" by Jaga Jazzist from the album "A Livingroom Hush"; first part is in 6/8, the remainder of the song is in 7/4.
★ (2001) "Push the Hand" by Toadies – verse is three measures of 7/4, followed by one measure of 8/4.
★ (2001) "Carne Voodoo" by Rocket From The Crypt – opening.
★ (2001) "Ticks and Leeches" by Tool – The majority of the song is in 7/4, with occasional switches to 4/4 (or 8/4)
★ (2001) "The Shape" by Slipknot – from Iowa.
★ (2002) "The Monkey Versus the Robot" by Piebald – verses in 7/4, chorus in 6/4 and the breakdown in 4/4.
★ (2002) "Moodswings" by My Vitriol – instrumental break at beginning and end.
★ (2002) "A good example of arbitrary presumption" by Sphere3 – main verse sections
★ (2002) "The Sound of Muzak" by Porcupine Tree – verse and instrumental.
★ (2002) "Wedding Nails" by Porcupine Tree – contains a measure of 7/4 at 1:41.
★ (2002) "Times Like These" by Foo Fighters – instrumental bridges only.
★ (2002) "King Of Terrors" by Symphony X – intro alternates between 7/4 and 8/4; verse alternates between 7/4 and 6/4.
★ (2003) "1010011010" by Cog – contains sections in 9/4, 6/8 and 4/4.
★ (2003) "Inertiatic ESP" by The Mars Volta – bridge.
★ (2003) "Panic Attack" by Finger Eleven – verses.
★ (2003) "Ride" by Samuel Hazo – features a large 7/4 section, along with many sections with varied and polyrhythmic meters.
★ (2003) "Hardball" by Estradasphere – has much variation between 4/4 and 7/4.
★ (2003) "2+2=5" by Radiohead – begins in 7/4 time and then switches to 4/4 1 minute and 22 seconds into the song (right after the words "two & two always makes five").
★ (2003) "This Dying Soul" by Dream Theater - instrumental bridge before final guitar solo
★ (2003)"I Won't See You Tonight p.2" by Avenged Sevenfold – the riff behind the guitar solo is in 7/4.
★ (2004) "A Canon" by Regina Spektor – first line. of pre-chorusish part features a bar in 7/4 ("I always knew it was coming this way...")
★ (2004) "Builder" by Gavin Castleton.
★ (2004) "Consequences David, You'll Meet Your Fate in the Styx" by Fear Before the March of Flames – contains parts in 3/4.
★ (2004) "Fuck Me for Free" by Recover – the verse is in 7/4.
★ (2004) "Little Thoughts" by Bloc Party – ending in 7/4.
★ (2004) "Blackmail the Universe" by Megadeth
★ (2004) "Sunrise" by Norah Jones – bridge only.
★ (2004) "Sacred Sound" by IQ - intro.
★ (2004) "Two Sides" by After Forever – beginning section, repeated later in song.
★ (2004) "Through Square Eyes" by After Forever – section about 4 minutes into the song.
★ (2004) "Hey! Is That a Ninja Up There?" by Minus the Bear – intro in 7/4, verses in 4/4, chorus in 7/4 and the bridge in 6/4.
★ (2004) "About to Rage" by Gov't Mule – verses in 7/4; chorus is 4/4, 4/4, 4/4, 3/4 played twice; most of solo section in 8/4 counted 2+3+3.
★ (2004) "Seven" by Necrophagist
★ (2004) "Yawn, Yawn, Yawn" by Les Savy Fav – verses.
★ (2005) "Protecting Me" by Aly & AJ
★ (2005) "Michio's Death Drive" by Minus the Bear – section in 7/4.
★ (2005) "Between the End and Where We Lie" by Thrice – can also be expressed in 7/8 and 9/8 combination; chorus is 7/4 + 2 measures 4/4.
★ (2005) "So Called Friend" by Porcupine Tree [2]
★ (2005) "Going to Peterborough" by Carpetburn - middle section played in 7/4.
★ (2005) "Deadwing" by Porcupine Tree
★ (2005) "That's Where It Is" by Carrie Underwood
★ (2005) "Wanderlust" by R.E.M. - chorus partially 7/4
★ (2006) "Detonation" by Trivium 7/4 in the intro to the song. Verses have 4/4, 2/4, 4/4 structure. Rest of song is 4/4.
★ (2006) "Inefficiencity" by Dan Webb
★ (2006) "Crazy People" by Dynamic Monotone - every other measure in instrumental break
★ (2006) "Laps In Seven" by Sam Bush
★ (2006) "The Allegory of Benjamin Franklin" by Pomme De Chien – heavy sections in 7/4 or 4+3.
★ (2006) "Brighter than a Thousand Suns" by Iron Maiden
★ (2006) "Bees" by The Tunguska Event - between second chorus and solo.
★ (2006) "Flathead" by The Fratellis – chant section.
★ (2006) "Attack of the 10 Octave Marimba" by the Lawless Percussion & Jazz Ensemble.
★ (2006) "Mudlark" by Kill Your Ex – most of the song is in 7/4.
★ (2006) "Fadeout" by +/-
★ (2006) "Gone" by Daughtry
★ (2006) "Jerry Likes My Corn" by Scott Frankel (music) and Michael Korie (lyrics) from the musical Grey Gardens
★ (2006) "Just Might Have Her Radio On" by Trent Tomlinson
★ (2007) "A Different World" by Bucky Covington - verse
★ (2007) "Most Girls" by Lea - bridge
★ (2007) "Fine Mattress" by Wruice Deuce
★ (2007) "222" by Paul McCartney
★ (2007) "Red Fox" by Tomahawk
7/8''septuple meter, usually 2+2+3''
★ (?) "Inspiration" by Jan de Haan for concert band - end section alternates between 4/4, 2/4, and 3/2
★ (1854) "Faust" Symphony by Franz Liszt (original version)
★ (1915) "Pantomime", from ''El amor brujo'', by Manuel de Falla
★ (1961) "Unsquare Dance" by Dave Brubeck
★ (1967) "Who's the Thief" by Andrew Lloyd Webber from Joseph And The Amazing Technicolour Dreamcoat
★ (1968) "Market Song" by Pentangle from the album Sweet Child
★ (1970) "The Temple" by Andrew Lloyd Webber from Jesus Christ Superstar
★ (1970) "Working Class Hero" by John Lennon
★ (1971) "Rubylove" by Cat Stevens, from the album Teaser and the Firecat, in 3+2+2, the typical Greek kalamatianos rhythm, with a verse in Greek.
★ (1971) "The Fish (''Schindleria Praematurus'')" by Yes (''Fragile'')
★ (1974) "Back in NYC" by Genesis - 7/8 with a few bars of 6/8 scattered throughout
★ (1975) "Migration" by Camel
★ (1976) "Dance on a Volcano" by Genesis
★ (1977) "Slava!" by Leonard Bernstein
★ (1977) "Beneath The Earth" by Alphonse Mouzon & Larry Coryell
★ (1975) "Aurora, Pt. 2" by Jean-Luc Ponty
★ (1980s) "Marching Season", "Keys to Imagination", "Within Attraction", "Santorini," and "Waltz in 7/8" by Yanni
★ (1983) "Tower Hill" by Clannad. In 7/8 throughout.
★ (1983) "Mother" by The Police
★ (1984) "AC/DC" from Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical Starlight Express
★ (1984) "Overkill", the theme song from ''The Bill'' (original mix)
★ (1986) "Ghost and the Black Hat" by The Go-Betweens
★ (1988) "Hello Radio" by They Might Be Giants
★ (1990) "(En) El Séptimo Día" by Soda Stereo
★ (1992) "By Demons Be Driven" by Pantera- album: Vulgar Display of Power
★ (1994) "Firedance" from Riverdance
★ (1994) "Dreaming In Metaphors" by Seal
★ (1995) "Kicking In The Water" by The Gandharvas
★ (1995) "Fireal" by Deftones
★ (1995) "Black Sun" by Siouxsie and the Banshees
★ (1995) "Hip Today" by Extreme
★ (1995) "Deadguy" by Ministry
★ (1995) "Good-N-Evil" by Traci Lords (from the album ''1000 Fires'')
★ (1996) "I Was Brought to My Senses" by Sting
★ (1997) "7/8" by Genesis
★ (1997) "Prairie Dog" by Laika
★ (1997) "Poor Gal" by Laika
★ (1997) "Blood + Bones (Moody Mix)" by Laika
★ (1998) "The Dreaming Tree" by Dave Matthews Band
★ (1998) "777" by Autechre
★ (1999) "A French Galleasse" by Rachel's
★ (1999) "Next 5 Minutes" by Steven Curtis Chapman
★ (1999) "Rendez-vous 6:02" by UK
★ (1999) "Lost And Found" by Camel(Rajaz)
★ (2000) "Aimum" by Bela Fleck & the Flecktones
★ (2000) "Sea Song" by Faraquet
★ (2000) "Maelk og Honning" [Tobias Trier Denmark
★ (2000) "Moccasin" by Laika
★ (2000) "Widows' Weed" by Laika
★ (2000) "Glory Cloud" by Laika
★ (2001) "Sempre Sim" by Jovino Santos Neto
★ (2003) "Zeal" by Plaid (band)
★ (2003) "Einstein-Rosen Bridge" and "Abomination Street" by Venetian Snares
★ (2003) "Ride" by Samuel Hazo
★ (2003) "The Opinionated Are So Opinionated" by Poison the Well
★ (2004) "Migration" and "Earthogrub" by Yak
★ (2004) "Malibalo" by Marilyn Mazur Partly in 6/8
★ (2005) "The Collector" by Nine Inch Nails – alternating bars of 6/8 and 7/8. could be considered one bar of 13/8.
★ (2006) "The Meaning of Love" by Joe Satriani
★ (2006) "Yakt" by [Yak]
★ (2007) "Suite 7 (Volume 8)" by Dynamic Monotone
Partially in 7/8★ (1957) 3rd movement of the Piano Concerto No. 2 by Shostakovich
★ (1964) "Anyone Who Had a Heart" by Burt Bacharach, sung by Dionne Warwick - 7/8 turnaround at the end of the bridge, as pointed out to Bacharach by Dionne Warwick.[3] However the song features "5/4, 4/4, to 7/8 and resolving on 5/8 in only eight bars" according to the All Music Guide.[4]
★ (1968) "Senhor F" by Os Mutantes- verses in 7/8
★ (1969) "My Human Gets Me Blues" by Captain Beefheart & the Magic Band (Don Van Vliet).[5]
★ (1970) "Devotion" by John McLaughlin
★ (1972) "Goodbye" by Chicago- two verses in the beginning and the instrumental after.
★ (1973) "The Cinema Show" by Genesis - the extended outro and keyboard solo.
★ (1973) "The Ocean" by Led Zeppelin 4/4 + 7/8 in the choruses (documented in several Led Zeppelin song books).
★ (1975) "Anthem" by Rush - introduction in 7/8, rest of song in 12/8.
★ (1976) "Chord Change" by Camel from Moonmadness - the first bars of the songs are in a very unsteady 7/8 metre.
★ (1977) "Mad Man Moon" by Genesis - piano solo section.
★ (1978) "Cygnus X-1 Book II: Hemispheres" by Rush- II. Apollo Bringer of Wisdom and III. Dionysus Bringer of Love, intros and main verses.
★ (1978) "Jocko Homo" by Devo – Verses and intro are in 7/8, chorus and bridge are in 4/4.
★ (1978) "La Villa Strangiato (An Exercise in Self-Indulgence)" by Rush – the entire "A Lerxst in Wonderland" section and the first 4 bars of the "Monsters" section.
★ (1979) "Animals" by Talking Heads
★ (1979) "Tattooed Love Boys" by The Pretenders - verses alternate between 7/8 and 4/4.
★ (1980) "Natural Science" by Rush – the "Hyperspace" section is in 7/8 (with the occasional 3/4 turnaround thrown in at the end of a phrase).
★ (1981) "Frame by Frame" by King Crimson - verse is in 7/8
★ (1981) "Tom Sawyer" by Rush - the instrumental break (not counting the 3/4 turnaround) and the closing.
★ (1982) "Subdivisions" by Rush - intro and verses in 7/8 and 4/4.
★ (1982) "Golden Brown" by The Stranglers - 6/8 but the instrumental bridges add an extra beat in every other measure, making 7/8.
★ (1984) "Three of a Perfect Pair" by King Crimson - choruses and solo are in 7/8, verses in 6/8.
★ (1984) "Warning" by Queensrÿche – the fast part of the guitar solo.
★ (1984) "Distant Early Warning" by Rush – a few short parts in 7/8 throughout the song, plus sections of 5/8 + 7/8.
★ (1986) ""Alexander the Great"" by Iron Maiden – instrumental part in the middle of the song.
★ (1986) "Piece By Piece" by Slayer - verses.
★ (1986) "The Man Who Sailed Around His Soul" by XTC - verses.
★ (1988) "You Enjoy Myself" by Phish - many passages in 7/4 or 7/8 throughout the song.
★ (1988) "Golgi Apparatus" by Phish - first part of instrumental section alternates between 7/8 and 4/4.
★ (1989) "91 Steps" by Erasure (7 bars of 7/8 then one bar of 3/8)
★ (1990) "Carnage in the Temple of the Damned" by Deicide – the short, abrupt, quirky blast beat changes in the song from straight 4/4 mid-tempo playing is in 7/8.
★ (1992) "Them Bones" by Alice in Chains - chorus and part of guitar solo is in 4/4.
★ (1992) "Malpractice" by Faith No More - variously in 7/8 and 4/4.
★ (1992) "Architecture Of Aggression" by Megadeth - bridge.
★ (1993) "Lost Machine" by Voivod
★ (1993) "Saint Augustine in Hell" by Sting
★ (1993) "Love Is Stronger Than Justice (The Munificent Seven)" by Sting - verse only. [1]
★ (1994) "The Day I Tried to Live" by Soundgarden - verse and much of chorus alternate as one measure of 7/8 and one of 4/4.
★ (1994) "March of the Pigs" by Nine Inch Nails - verse and intro varies from 7/8 and 4/4.
★ (1994) "I'm Broken" by Pantera - verses
★ (1995) "Bury Me In Smoke" by Down - intro alternates between two bars of 4/4 and 4/4 + 7/8
★ (1995) "Bro Dependent" by Lagwagon is 7/8 and 4/4.
★ (1995) "Die To Live" by Steve Vai - alternates between 7/4 (or 7/8?) and 4/4.
★ (1996) "That, That Is" by Yes - contains several sections of 7/8.
★ (1997) "Mindfield" by Tidal Wave - midsection including guitar solo
★ (1997) "A Fall Thru the Ground" by John Frusciante - in 7/8 until 2:03, where it switches to 4/4.
★ (1997) "Paranoid Android" by Radiohead - has several four-measure sections consisting of three measures in 7/8 followed by one of 4/4.
★ (1997) "Venus Man Trap" by Veruca Salt
★ (1997) "Waltz in 7/8" by Yanni - starts in Alla Breve (Cut) Time and The goes to 7/8.
★ (1997) "The Accolade" by Symphony X - several 7/8 sections throughout.
★ (1997) "Providence" by Godspeed You! Black Emperor - The movement "Dead Metheny" is in 7/8, roughly 2:45 to 10:51 on the cd version.
★ (1998) "Bad Religion" by Godsmack - end of the song.
★ (1998) "Spark" by Tori Amos, 6/8 and 7/8 verses
★ (1999) "Closing In" by The Living End - riff from 1:00 to 1:24
★ (1999) "Infinity Machine" by I Mother Earth
★ (1999) "Better World" by Toto
★ (2000) "Negative Space" by Spineshank
★ (2001) "Rise n' Shine (Epic Doobie Nightmare #1)" by Estradasphere, during the section where the right speaker cuts in and out.
★ (2002) "And All That Could Have Been" by Nine Inch Nails - verses.
★ (2002) "Seven-Eight" by Funky Rx - entire song.
★ (2002) "Deliverance" by Opeth - intro part.
★ (2002) "Carbon" by Tori Amos - 6/8 7/8 verses.
★ (2002) "Motherfucker=Redeemer (Part Two)" by Godspeed You! Black Emperor – the first recognizable beat up until around 7:16 on the cd version is in 7/8.
★ (2003) "Gravity" by A Perfect Circle - most of the song, with the ending written in 8/8.
★ (2002) "Shrimp.SNG" by Sphere3 - various sections
★ (2003) "Streetlights, Empty Wells" by Anatomy of a Ghost - 1st verse and part of middle.
★ (2003) "Fireproof" by Pillar - the bridge contains one measure of 7/8 at the end.
★ (2003) "Massive Bereavement" by Oceansize
★ (2004) "Chewbacca Wookie" by Bryan Pardo - Into the Freylakh
★ (2004) "Earth City" by Martin O'Donnell (from the Halo Original Soundtrack) - the melody alternates each measure from 6/8 to 7/8.
★ (2004) "The Bitter End" by Sum 41
★ (2005) "It's Not Me" by 3 Doors Down - bridge.
★ (2005) "A Classic Arts Showcase" by ...And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead- album: Worlds Apart - beginning and ending in 7/8, middle in 4/4.
★ (2005) "Farting With a Walkman On" by Bloodhound Gang - last measures.
★ (2005) "Believe" by Journey - switches to 4/4 later.
★ (2005) "Fight For All The Wrong Reasons" by Nickelback - breakdown.
★ (2005) "Lately" by David Gray - verse and instrumental.
★ (2005) "Event Horizon Escape" by Periphery - verses and bridge.
★ (2005) "General Grievous" from the Star Wars Episode III soundtrack by John Williams - includes several noticeable phrases featuring 7/8 and alternation between 3/4 and 9/8.
★ (2005) "Avenue X" by Jonathan Newman - several brief phrases scattered throughout piece.
★ (2006) "Oboe Schuhe Overture" by Pomme De Chien - sections in 7/8 time.
★ (2006) "Intension" by Tool
★ (2006) "Slow Cheetah" by Red Hot Chili Peppers - final instrumental section.
★ (2006) "Giraffe Food" by Redrick Sultan - verses.
★ (2006) "This is Not a Love Song" by Dawn Xiana Moon - intro and verses.
★ (2006) "Petslenen" by Pomme De Chien - short sections switch from 7/8 to 4/4.
★ (2006) "Unmarked Graves" by Misery Index
★ (2006) "Degradation" by Flatline - chorus is 7/8 7/8 7/8 8/8 while solo is 8/8 7/8.
★ (2007) "Child of the City" by Clutch
★ (2007) "Era Vulgaris" by Queens of the Stone Age - Middle 8
★ (2007) "Bird In a Cage" by Dynamic Monotone - last measure of last bridge
★ (?) "Riding on the Wind" by Guo Wenjing - first and last 3 to 4 minutes in 7/8 (2+3+2 and 3+2+2) as well as occasional phrases in 5/8.
Il pourrait y en avoir 1000 de plus dans ta liste (néanmoins intéressante) que ça resterait malgré tout marginal à côté de la centaine de milliers de chansons basées sur des rythmes à quatre temps. (cela dit je suis étonné d'en voir autant que je connais par cœur et pour lesquelles je n'avais jamais percuté)
Je pourrais te proposer de nous concilier sur un truc un peu vague du style "les chansons sur des rythmes à sept temps sont peu communes" parce que finalement on joue sur les mots, mais non, je vais pas dire que j'ai tort alors que je suis persuadé d'avoir raison et que tu t'acharnes simplement pour ne pas passer pour un branque qui a voulu se la raconter érudit. Quand je prends la définition du mot atypique je vois "Qui diffère du type normal, habituel." et je persiste à dire qu'un rythme à sept temps ça diffère du standard et traditionnel quatre temps, dans l'absolu, et encore plus par rapport au reste de la discographie des Pink Floyd.
Parlons plutôt sac de rando parce que ça c'est vraiment ce que les gens veulent entendre.
Avec mille de plus, ça serait quand même plus pertinent je trouve.
C'était pour dire rien du tout.
Pour offrir bien sûr.
Mmmh, offrir à qui?
Anniv' de mon ex demain.
Un texto je veux bien mais un cadeau non hein. Rhoo.
C'est un 16gigas en soldes, ça ne coute pas non plus un rein.
Atypique c'est plus différent que rare , Connard.
Donc on est encore plus d'accord alors ?
Anniv' de mon ex demain.
T'espères te faire sucer en retour ou c'est juste pour avoir un contact avec la gent féminine ?
Non on continue à se faire des cadeaux juste. Je suis pas Hohun non plus j'ai d'autres amies.
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