Wrong time signature in music sheet [duplicate]

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  • Notes not adding up to time signature?

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I found below music sheet from one website. I doubt if this piece is correct because there are 12 Eighth Notes are used in one measure. I think it is mathematically wrong. Please help.



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marked as duplicate by David Bowling, Tim guitar
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Sep 10 at 9:59


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    Those are triplets. Each of the groups of three eighth notes are played in the time of one quarter note.
    – David Bowling
    Sep 10 at 5:30














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  • Notes not adding up to time signature?

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I found below music sheet from one website. I doubt if this piece is correct because there are 12 Eighth Notes are used in one measure. I think it is mathematically wrong. Please help.



enter image description here










share|improve this question













marked as duplicate by David Bowling, Tim guitar
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  • 3




    Those are triplets. Each of the groups of three eighth notes are played in the time of one quarter note.
    – David Bowling
    Sep 10 at 5:30












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This question already has an answer here:



  • Notes not adding up to time signature?

    5 answers



I found below music sheet from one website. I doubt if this piece is correct because there are 12 Eighth Notes are used in one measure. I think it is mathematically wrong. Please help.



enter image description here










share|improve this question














This question already has an answer here:



  • Notes not adding up to time signature?

    5 answers



I found below music sheet from one website. I doubt if this piece is correct because there are 12 Eighth Notes are used in one measure. I think it is mathematically wrong. Please help.



enter image description here





This question already has an answer here:



  • Notes not adding up to time signature?

    5 answers







guitar sheet-music






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asked Sep 10 at 5:23









Sooraj

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marked as duplicate by David Bowling, Tim guitar
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Sep 10 at 9:59


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.









  • 3




    Those are triplets. Each of the groups of three eighth notes are played in the time of one quarter note.
    – David Bowling
    Sep 10 at 5:30












  • 3




    Those are triplets. Each of the groups of three eighth notes are played in the time of one quarter note.
    – David Bowling
    Sep 10 at 5:30







3




3




Those are triplets. Each of the groups of three eighth notes are played in the time of one quarter note.
– David Bowling
Sep 10 at 5:30




Those are triplets. Each of the groups of three eighth notes are played in the time of one quarter note.
– David Bowling
Sep 10 at 5:30










2 Answers
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As noted in other comments and answers, the notes are explicitly marked with a cursive "3" (fingerings use upright numbers, in contrast) as triplets, 3 notes to the usual 2. It is worth noting that particularly in older scores, the cursive "3" may be missing and the triplets may already be implied by the beaming of three notes to one beam. It can also happen that the "3" is present a few times explicitly and then left off.






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    As David Bowling noted in the comments: these are triplets. See the little "3"s above the notes? That means you need to play three notes in the time normally assigned to two notes of the given type. So these are eighth triples, three of them amount to two normal eighths, twelve of them amount to eight eighths, and everything turns out to be correct.






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      2 Answers
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      2 Answers
      2






      active

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      votes









      active

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      active

      oldest

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      up vote
      4
      down vote













      As noted in other comments and answers, the notes are explicitly marked with a cursive "3" (fingerings use upright numbers, in contrast) as triplets, 3 notes to the usual 2. It is worth noting that particularly in older scores, the cursive "3" may be missing and the triplets may already be implied by the beaming of three notes to one beam. It can also happen that the "3" is present a few times explicitly and then left off.






      share|improve this answer
























        up vote
        4
        down vote













        As noted in other comments and answers, the notes are explicitly marked with a cursive "3" (fingerings use upright numbers, in contrast) as triplets, 3 notes to the usual 2. It is worth noting that particularly in older scores, the cursive "3" may be missing and the triplets may already be implied by the beaming of three notes to one beam. It can also happen that the "3" is present a few times explicitly and then left off.






        share|improve this answer






















          up vote
          4
          down vote










          up vote
          4
          down vote









          As noted in other comments and answers, the notes are explicitly marked with a cursive "3" (fingerings use upright numbers, in contrast) as triplets, 3 notes to the usual 2. It is worth noting that particularly in older scores, the cursive "3" may be missing and the triplets may already be implied by the beaming of three notes to one beam. It can also happen that the "3" is present a few times explicitly and then left off.






          share|improve this answer












          As noted in other comments and answers, the notes are explicitly marked with a cursive "3" (fingerings use upright numbers, in contrast) as triplets, 3 notes to the usual 2. It is worth noting that particularly in older scores, the cursive "3" may be missing and the triplets may already be implied by the beaming of three notes to one beam. It can also happen that the "3" is present a few times explicitly and then left off.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Sep 10 at 7:42







          user52808



























              up vote
              1
              down vote













              As David Bowling noted in the comments: these are triplets. See the little "3"s above the notes? That means you need to play three notes in the time normally assigned to two notes of the given type. So these are eighth triples, three of them amount to two normal eighths, twelve of them amount to eight eighths, and everything turns out to be correct.






              share|improve this answer
























                up vote
                1
                down vote













                As David Bowling noted in the comments: these are triplets. See the little "3"s above the notes? That means you need to play three notes in the time normally assigned to two notes of the given type. So these are eighth triples, three of them amount to two normal eighths, twelve of them amount to eight eighths, and everything turns out to be correct.






                share|improve this answer






















                  up vote
                  1
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  1
                  down vote









                  As David Bowling noted in the comments: these are triplets. See the little "3"s above the notes? That means you need to play three notes in the time normally assigned to two notes of the given type. So these are eighth triples, three of them amount to two normal eighths, twelve of them amount to eight eighths, and everything turns out to be correct.






                  share|improve this answer












                  As David Bowling noted in the comments: these are triplets. See the little "3"s above the notes? That means you need to play three notes in the time normally assigned to two notes of the given type. So these are eighth triples, three of them amount to two normal eighths, twelve of them amount to eight eighths, and everything turns out to be correct.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Sep 10 at 7:24









                  Richard Metzler

                  3625




                  3625












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