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Beat

  • In physics and sound, a beat is the oscillation between zero intensity and full intensity that occcurs when two frequencies (which are not harmonically related) are added together, caused by alternating constructive and destructive interference of the pressure waves. Beating is heard as a pulsation in loudness of two nearby frequencies, f1 and f2, at the rate of |f1f2|. Thus f = 0 when the two waves are in unison and as the difference between f1 and f2 increases, the speed decreases till beyond a certain proximity beating stops and a roughness is heard instead, after which the two pitches are perceived as separate. Beating can also be heard between notes that are near to, but not exactly, a harmonic interval. The composer Alvin Lucier has written many pieces which feature interference beats as their main focus. Musicians commonly use interference beats to objectively check tuning at the unison, perfect fifth, or other simple harmonic intervals.

  • In music, beat is any of the periodic transient signals in music that mark the rhythm. In particular, it can and often does take the form referred to above, caused by alternating constructive and desctructive interference of sound waves.
    • Beat can also mean solely the bass and snare drums of the rhythm. DJs often beatmatch the songs that they play.
    • Interference beats are used in tuning, see tuning and physics above.
    • musical genre: Beat is a style played in the 1960s.
    • The Beat (band), known in the US as The English Beat, was a UK ska band of the early 1980s.

  • In literature beat is a genre of literature written by beatniks. See beat generation.

  • In poetry, beat is sometimes used to refer to metrical feet. There is also beat poetry; see beat generation.

  • police: Beat is the territory and time that a police officer patrols.

Referenced By

American poetry | Bill Burroughs | Black Mountain Poets | Charles Olson | Cid Corman | Diane Di Prima | Diane Wakoski | Eurovision Song Contest 1990 | Ezra Pound | Famous gay lesbian and bisexual people | Famous gay lesbian or bisexual people | Gary Snyder | Janine Pommy Vega | Joanne Kyger | Language poets | Lew Welch | List of famous gay, lesbian, and bisexual people | List of famous gay, lesbian, or bisexual people | List of famous gay, lesbian or bisexual people | List of famous gay lesbian and bisexual people | List of funny gay, lesbian or bisexual people | List of musical topics | Literary Kicks | Madeline Gleason | Poetry of the United States | Pound, Ezra | Rhythm | Rhytm | United States poetry | W. S. Burroughs | William Burroughs | William S. Burroughs

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Beat".

 

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