There are many types of tuplets (duplet, triplet, sextuplet, quintuplet, etc.) that can be added to your score. For example, a 16th quintuplet is a group of 5 16th notes played in the time that is usually taken up by only 4 16th notes.
- What is a 7 tuplet called?
- What are 5 Tuplets called?
- What are Tuplets in music?
- What is a 13 tuplet called?
What is a 7 tuplet called?
In simple time signatures (see 1.5 Simple Meter), tuplets/grouplets always use the next longer rhythmic value. Quintuplets (five equal parts), sextuplets (six equal parts), and septuplets (seven equal parts) all use the rhythmic value for a four-part division.
What are 5 Tuplets called?
A Simple Chart of Multiple Birth Terms
Number of Babies | Term Used |
---|---|
5 | Quintuplets (quints) |
6 | Sextuplets |
7 | Septuplets |
8 | Octuplets |
What are Tuplets in music?
In music, a tuplet (also irrational rhythm or groupings, artificial division or groupings, abnormal divisions, irregular rhythm, gruppetto, extra-metric groupings, or, rarely, contrametric rhythm) is "any rhythm that involves dividing the beat into a different number of equal subdivisions from that usually permitted by ...
What is a 13 tuplet called?
It's a tuplet like a quintuplet or sextuplet but it's based on 13. I know it can be notated with "13:2" and a bracket over the notes but I can't do that in Guitar Pro so I just selected all the notes and applied a 13-tuplet to them. I think this would be a called a triskaidekatuplet but I can't verify that on the net.