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Syncopation

In music, syncopation is the stressing of normally unstressed beat in a bar or the failure to sound a tone on an accented beat. For example, in 4/4 time, the first and third beats are normally stressed; if instead the second and fourth beats are stressed and the first and third unstressed, the rhythm is syncopated. Also, if the musician suddenly does not play anything on beat 1, that would also be syncopation.

The stress can also shift by less than a whole beat so it falls on an off-beat, as in the following example where the stress in the first bar is shifted by a quaver (or eighth-note):

Syncopation example.png

Playing a note ever so slightly before or after a beat is another form of syncopation because this produces an unexpected accent.

Syncopation is used on occasion in many music styles, including classical music, but it is a fundamental constant presence in such styles as ragtime and jazz. In the form of a backbeat, syncopation is used in virtually all contemporary popular music.

Syncopation in dance

The term syncopation in dancing is used in two meanings.

  1. The first one matches the musical one: stepping on (or otherwise emphacizing) an unstressed beat. For example, ballroom Cha cha is a syncopated dance in this sense, because the basic step "breaks on two
  2. The word syncopation is often used by dance teachers to mean improvised or rehearsed execution of step patterns that have more rhythmical nuances than "standard" step patterns. It takes advanced dancing skill to dance syncopations in this sense. Advanced dancing of West Coast Swing makes heavy use of "syncopation" in this sense.

A common incorrect usage of syncopation is to refer to a double time rhythm as syncopation. Incorrect: "In music, spliting the beat into two parts is syncopation." Again, please note this is incorrect, but often taught.

Many dance teachers are now abandoning meaning #2, the loose use of the term syncopation and are now using the term "double-time" steps, when that what they mean. They've decided that they don't change the meaning of other musical terms, so they should honor the musical definition of syncopation. In this way, they can enjoy subtle musical syncopations and dance to them as well.

Dance syncopation often matches musical syncopation as when (in West Coast Swing) the leader touches slightly before beat 3 or stomps on beat 6. Kelly Buckwalter (a Two Time US Open WCS Champion) teaches these syncopations.

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Referenced By

Ballroom Glossary | Cajun music | Glossary of ballroom dance terms | Glossary of partner dance terms | List of musical topics | Music Theory | Music of Louisiana | West Coast Swing | West coast swing (dance)

 

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

 

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