Quintuple meter


Quintuple meter or quintuple time is a musical meter characterized by five beats in a measure.
The beats can have the pattern strong-weak-medium-weak-weak or strong-weak-weak-medium-weak, although a survey of certain forms of mostly American popular music suggests that latter is the more common of these two in these styles. The beats may use any other combination, including five equally-stressed beats in every bar, each consisting of an accent and a non-accent.
Like the more common duple, triple, and quadruple meters, it may be simple, with each beat divided in half, or compound, with each beat divided into thirds. The most common time signatures for simple quintuple meter are and, and compound quintuple meter is most often written in.

Notation

Simple quintuple meter can be written in or time, but may also be notated by using regularly alternating bars of triple and duple meters, for example +. Compound quintuple meter, with each of its five beats divided into three parts, can similarly be notated using a time signature of, by writing triplets on each beat of a simple quintuple signature, or by regularly alternating meters such as +.
Another notational variant involves compound meters, in which two or three numerals take the place of the expected numerator. In simple quintuple meter, the 5 may be replaced as or for example. A time signature of, however, does not necessarily mean the music is in a compound quintuple meter. It may, for example, indicate a bar of triple meter in which each beat is subdivided into five parts. In this case, the meter is sometimes characterized as "triple quintuple time".
It is also possible for a time signature to be used for an irregular, or additive, metrical pattern, such as groupings of eighth notes or, for example in the Hymn to the Sun and Hymn to Nemesis by Mesomedes of Crete,, which may alternatively be given the composite signature.
Similarly, the presence of some bars with a or meter signature does not necessarily mean that the music is in quintuple meter overall. The regular alternation of and in Bruce Hornsby's "The Tango King", for example, results in an overall nonuple meter.

History

Before the 20th century, quintuple time was rare in European concert music, but is more commonly found in other cultures.

Ancient Greek music

Rhythm in ancient Greek music was closely tied to poetic meter, and included what are understood today as quintuple patterns. The two Delphic Hymns from the second century BC both provide examples. The First Delphic Hymn, by Athenaeus, son of Athenaeus, is in the quintuple Cretic meter throughout. The first nine of the ten sections of the Second Hymn, by Limenius, are also in Cretic meter.
In addition to the Cretic meter, which consisted of a long-short-long pattern, ancient Greek music had seven other quintuple meters: Bacchic, Palimbacchic, four species of Paeanic, and hyporchematic.

Asia, Transcaucasia, and the Middle East

Arabic theorists already in the early Abbasid period described modal rhythmic cycles, that included quintuple meters, though taxonomies and terminology vary amongst writers. The first figure to describe these rhythms was Abū Yūsuf Ya‘qūb al-Kindī, who divided them into two broad categories, ṯẖaqīl and khafīf. Two of his ṯẖaqīl modes—ṯẖaqīl thānī and ramal —and one khafīf mode are quintuple. The most important writers of the later Abbasid period were Abū Naṣr al-Fārābī and Ibn Sīnā. Al-Fārābī elaborated the rhythmic system established a century earlier by another important early Abbasid musician, Isḥāq al-Mawṣilī, who had based it on local traditions, without any knowledge of classical Greek music theory. Isḥāq's and al-Fārābī's system consisted of eight rhythmic modes, the third and fourth of which were quintuple: called ṯẖaqīl thānī, and khafīf al-ṯẖaqīl thānī, both of which are short-short-short-long, in slow and fast tempo, respectively. This terminology and these definitions continued to be found as late as the 12th century in Muslim Spain, for example in a document by Abd-Allāh ibn Muḥammad ib al-Ṣīd al-Baṭaliawsī.
In the Moroccan Malḥūn repertory, rhythms are sometimes introduced into the basic meter of. Turkish classical music employs a system of rhythmic modes, which include units ranging from two to ten time units. The five-beat meter is called türk aksağı.
The traditional music of Adjara in Western Georgia includes an ancient war-dance called Khorumi, which is in quintuple meter.
The cyclically repeating fixed time cycles of Carnatic and Hindustani classical music, called tālas, include both fast and slow quintuple patterns, as well as binary, ternary, and septuple cycles. In the Carnatic system, there is a complex "formal" system of tālas which is of great antiquity, and a more recent, rather simpler "informal" system, comprising selected tālas from the "formal" system, plus two fast tālas called Cāpu. The slow quintuple tāla, called Jhampā is from the formal system, and consists of a pattern of beats; the fast quintuple tāla is called khaṇḍa Cāpu or ara Jhampā, and consists of beats. However, the pattern of beats marking the rotation of the cycle does not necessarily indicate the internal rhythmic organization. For example, although the Jhampā tāla, in its most common miśra variety, is governed by, the most characteristic rhythm of melodies in this tāla is.
The tālas in Hindustani music are somewhat more complicated. To begin with, they are not systematically codified, but rather comprise a miscellany of patterns from a number of different repertories. Secondly, the counting units of each tāla are grouped into segments called vibhāg, which constitute slower "beats" of from to 5 of those counting units. Third, in addition to the sounded vibhāg, marked by hand-claps, there are also vibhāg marked only by a wave of the hand—the so-called khālī beats. The two quintuple tālas in these repertories are Jhaptāl——and Sūltāl—. Both are measured by ten mātrā units, but Jhaptāl is divided into four unequal vibhāg in two halves of five mātrā each, and Sūltāl is divided into five equal vibhāg, the second and fifth of which are khālī.
The kasa repertory of traditional Korean court music often employs cycles in quintuple time, even though Korean traditional music terminology has no specific term for it, and the meter is rarely found in Korean folk music. This repertory can be traced back in some cases to the fifteenth century, and quintuple is the oldest surviving traditional Korean meter.

Australia

Quintuple meter occurs as a variation in some women's dance songs of indigenous Australians, where a measure is occasionally inserted into songs with a basic duple or four-beat pattern.

The Americas

Traditional dance songs of the Yupik of Alaska are accompanied by frame drums, beaten with a long thin wand, most commonly in a crotchet–dotted crotchet pattern.

European folk music

Many European folk and traditional repertories also feature quintuple meter. This is particularly true of Slavic cultural groups. The Bulgarian "paidushko" dance, for example, is in a fast, counted. In north-eastern Poland, five-beat bars are frequently found in wedding songs, with rather slow tempos and not accompanied by dancing. Traditional Russian wedding songs also are in quintuple time. The Poles and Russians share this proclivity for quintuple meter with the Finns, Sames, Estonians, and Latvians. In Finland, the Kalevalaic "runometric" songs are the most distinctive feature of folk music, and the most common melody of these epic songs is in quintuple meter. This melody was described in the oldest study of runo singing in 1766, but first published in a musical transcription only about 20 years later. One South Slavic example is recorded in a manual published in 1714 by the Venetian dancing master Gregorio Lambranzi. It is a forlana titled "Polesana", probably meaning "From Pola", a city in Istria—today a part of Croatia but a Venetian possession until 1947. Although Lambranzi notated this dance in time, its recurring phrase structure shows it to be in compound-quintuple time, so that its correct form is actually written in.
Greek folk music is also characterized by rhythms in asymmetrical meters. The repertory of the Peloponnese, for example, includes the Doric tsakonikos from Doric-speaking Kynouria in time. The Epirus region of Northern Greece also has dance melodies in a slow 5.
Spanish folk music is also noted for the use of quintuple meter, particularly well-known examples being the Castilian rueda and the Basque zortziko, but it is also found in the music of Extremadura, Aragon, Valencia, and Catalonia. Some types of the folk dances collectively referred to as gavottes, and stemming from Lower Brittany in France are in meter, though,, and are also found. In the Alsatian region of Kochersberg, a peasant dance called the Kochersberger Tanz is in time, and is similar to a dance of the Upper Palatinate in Bavaria called Der Zwiefache or Gerad und Ungerad, because it alternates even and uneven bars.

European art music

Medieval and Renaissance

In European art music it only became possible in the 14th century to notate quintuple rhythms unambiguously, through the use of minor or reversed coloration. In some instances from the late-14th-century Ars subtilior period, quintuple passages occur which are long enough to regard as an established meter. For example, in the secunda pars of an anonymous two-voice Fortune, a "clear and definite rhythm" in the upper part creates a meter set against the of the lower part. The earliest complete European compositions in quintuple time, however, appear to be seven villancicos in the Cancionero Musical de Palacio, which were composed between 1516 and 1520. Notation of the quintuple meter in these seven pieces is achieved in various ways:
Other examples from the 16th century include the In Nomine "Trust" by Christopher Tye, the "Qui tollis" section of Jacob Obrecht's Missa "Je ne demande", the "Sanctus" from the Missa Paschalis by Heinrich Isaac, and the final "Agnus Dei" of Antoine Brumel's Missa "Bon temps". Keyboard examples from this period include the first half of an English setting of the offertory Felix namque from about 1530, and a passage in no. 41 of the Libro de tientos by Francisco Correa de Arauxo.

Baroque and Classical

In the Baroque and Classical eras quintuple meter is, if anything, even less frequently encountered than in the Renaissance. One possible example is the ritornello that precedes and follows Orfeo's aria "Vi ricorda" in act 2 of Claudio Monteverdi's L'Orfeo. The notation is problematic, however, and while several editors have transcribed it in quintuple meter, others interpret it differently. The verses of Giovanni Valentini's madrigal Con guardo altero, published in Musiche a doi voci is composed in. Johann Heinrich Schmelzer included a section of 27 measures in his Harmonia à 5, composed by at least 1668. Two brief passages of occur in the "mad scene" from Handel's opera Orlando, first at the words "Già solco l'onde" when the demented hero believes he has embarked on Charon's boat on the Styx, and then again two bars later. Charles Burney found this whole scene admirable, as a portrait of Orlando's madness, but observed that "Handel has endeavoured to describe the hero's perturbation of intellect by fragments of symphony in, a division of time which can only be borne in such a situation". Burney's German contemporary, Johann Kirnberger, also felt that "No one can repeat groups of five and even less of seven equal pulses in succession without wearisome strain".
Another exceptional 18th-century example is an entire aria composed in time, "Se la sorte mi condanna" found in Andrea Adolfati's opera Arianna, but the English theater composer William Reeve, with the last movement of his Gypsy's Glee, to the words "Come, stain your cheeks with nut or berry" is credited with having composed an example in true quintuple time, "for instead of the usual division of the bar into two parts, such as might be expressed by alternate bars of and, or and, there are five distinct beats in every bar, each consisting of an accent and a non-accent. This freedom from the ordinary alternation of two and three is well expressed by the grouping of the accompaniment, which varies throughout the movement…".

19th century

There appear to have been several motivations for composers to use quintuple time: firstly to demonstrate technical skill, as in the Tye and Correa de Arauxo examples, and secondly to produce an atmospheric effect, or to suggest unease or unusual excitement, as in Handel's Orlando. In the 19th century, a third motivation arises with the rise of nationalistic music, which often invokes folk-music elements. In any case, quintuple time becomes much more frequent in the 19th century. Early examples include Fugue 20 from Anton Reicha's Trente-six fugues for piano, the tenor aria "Viens, gentille dame" from act 2 of François-Adrien Boieldieu's opera La dame blanche, and the third movement, from Frédéric Chopin's Piano Sonata No. 1 in C minor, Op. 4. Although Reicha's fugue probably falls into the category of technical skill, the composer does mention taking as a model for the meter the Alsatian Kochersberger Tanz.
Nationalistic influence is clearer in the operas of the Russian composer Mikhail Glinka: the "Nuptial chorus and scene" from act 3 of the opera A Life for the Tsar was the first time a composer of art music set the pentasyllabic hemistichs of Russian wedding songs in quintuple meter instead of adapting it to a more conventional one. In his next opera, Ruslan and Ludmila Glinka repeated the effect in the opening of act 1, where the chorus sings an epithalamium to Lel', the Slavonic god of love, once again in quintuple time.. Later Russian examples are found in Tchaikovsky's folk-song settings: Fifty Russian Folk Songs for piano four-hands, Children's Ukrainian and Russian Folksongs, and Sixty-Six Russian Folk Songs for voice and piano, where quintuple meter is notated by regularly alternating signatures, usually and.
Shorter passages also occur in the music of Hector Berlioz: La tempête, later incorporated into Lélio as the finale, has "quintuple metre for a whole section, notated in compound duple; 'bars' of are defined by a recurring rhythmic pattern and by accents ", and the "Combat de ceste", from Les Troyens, has "an attractive section, only eight bars long". The outer sections of the scherzo from Alexander Borodin's unfinished Third Symphony are in time, interrupted six times in bars 36–38, 69–71, 180–82, 218–20, 352–54, and 392–94 with a three-bar group in. The central trio section, b. 235–313 is in time.
From around the middle of the century, there is Carl Loewe's ballad for voice and piano, "Prinz Eugen, der edle Ritter", Op. 92, which is in time throughout Ferdinand Hiller's Piano Trio No. 4, Op. 64 and Rhythmische Studien for piano, and a String Trio by K. J. Bischoff, which was awarded a prize by the Deutsche Tonhalle in 1853. The piano virtuoso Charles-Valentin Alkan showed an interest in unusual rhythmic devices, and composed at least four keyboard pieces in quintuple time: the first three of the Deuxième recueil d'impromptus, Op. 32, no. 2, Andantino, Allegretto, and Vivace, and a "Zorzico dance" episode in the Petit Caprice, réconciliation, Op. 42. In opera, Wagner, inserted several bars in "Tristan, der Held, in jubelnder Kraft", in act 3 of Tristan und Isolde. Another instance from around this same time is found in Anton Rubinstein's "sacred opera" Der Thurm zu Babel, Op. 80. In Johannes Brahms's late collection of six vocal quartets, Op. 112, the second piece, "Nächtens", is entirely in. At the very end of the century, Alban Berg used meter throughout his song-setting of Theodor Storm's poem, "Schließe mir die Augen beide".
Three of the best-known examples of quintuple meter in the symphonic repertoire are from late in the neoromantic period, which reaches from the mid-19th century through World War I: the second movement of Tchaikovsky's Symphony No. 6 in B minor, "Pathétique", Op. 74 , Rachmaninoff's The Isle of the Dead, Op. 29, and the opening movement, "Mars, the Bringer of War" of The Planets by Gustav Holst. The first theme of Tchaikovsky's Symphony No. 6, mvmt. II is shown below.
\relative c

The Finnish composer Jean Sibelius used a pattern of quintuple meter in the third movement of Kullervo, where "the orchestra maintains a pattern of five beats in a bar, while the chorus elongates its lines to phrases of fifteen, ten, eight, and twelve beats, respectively". These are Karelian rhythms, reflecting nationalism in Sibelius's music. He used these quintuple meters as well in several male-chorus works: "Venematka", the third movement, "Hyvää iltaa, lintuseni", from Rakastava, Op. 14, and "Sortunut ääni".
In 1895, the British composer Samuel Coleridge-Taylor wrote the second movement, "Serenade", of his Fantasiestücke, Op. 5, for string quartet in time. A little more than ten years later, the Scottish composer Robert Ernest Bryson wrote a string-orchestra fantasy titled Vaila in time.
In the piano repertoire, the "Promenade", from Modest Mussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition, has five versions, in each of which is mixed with other meters, regularly or irregularly:
  1. alternates with for eight bars, then two of and one pair of +, ending with twelve bars of
  2. alternates regularly with throughout
  3. regular alternation of and until the final two bars, which are and C
  4. irregular mixture of,, and, with a single bar at the end
  5. four pairs of regularly alternating and, then an irregular mixture of,, and to the end.
The opening measures are shown below:


To this same period also belongs "Prizrak", in time, which is No. 4 of Sergei Prokofiev's Four Pieces for Piano, Op. 3.
These examples are all simple quintuple time. Compound quintuple meter is less frequent, but an instance is found in the middle section of the third movement, "Andante grazioso", of Brahms's Piano Trio No. 3 in C minor, Op. 101, which is in with turnarounds. "Fêtes", the second movement of Claude Debussy's Nocturnes for orchestra, also has a recurring passage of two bars, embedded in a context of mainly compound triple bars. The seventh of Florent Schmitt's Eight Short Pieces for piano four-hands, "Complainte", is in with occasional bars of inserted. The first section of Nikolai Medtner's Piano Sonata Op. 25 No. 2 in E minor, which is from 1911, is "perhaps the most extended piece of music in time in existence".

20th century

The common occurrence of quintuple meter in many folk-music traditions caused an increase in its appearance in the works of composers with nationalistic tendencies in the early 20th century. Examples are the Prelude in the Unison from George Enescu's Orchestral Suite No. 1, Op. 9, "In Mixolydian Mode", "Bulgarian Rhythm ", and the third of "Six Dances in Bulgarian Rhythm", nos. 48, 115, and 150 from Béla Bartók's Mikrokosmos, the "Chanson épique", no. 2 from Maurice Ravel's song cycle Don Quichotte à Dulcinée, and the first theme group of Carlos Chávez's Sinfonía india, which is predominantly in time, but mixed with other meters. Another impulse for the use of quintuple meter was to evoke pagan and specifically Ancient Greek culture. The meter of the bacchanalian "Danse générale" concluding Ravel's ballet Daphnis et Chloé is a particularly well-known example. In his First Symphony, the Sinfonía de Antígona, Carlos Chávez reworked incidental music he had composed in 1932 for a production of Sophocles' Antigone in the adaptation by Jean Cocteau. In this symphony Chávez made extensive use of the Greek paeonic meter, notated in time in the score. The fourth and last movement of Ravel's String Quartet is mostly in and time, alternating several times with time.
A fourth example from Ravel is a particularly intense, if brief use of quintuples for symbolic purposes. This is Frontispice for two pianos, written at the request of Ricciotto Canudo to accompany a philosophical meditation on World War I, titled S.P. 503, le poème du Vardar. Canudo's title bears the numerical designation of the postal sector of his combat division, and Ravel used the numbers as the basis of his composition. Five staves of music, "'progressing' vertically from flats through naturals to sharps, are played by five hands in meters of and ".
The Basque setting of Pierre Loti's play Ramuntcho made the inclusion of Basque traditional melodies in the incidental music composed for it in 1907 by Gabriel Pierné a natural choice. Pierné included at the end of act 2 an arrangement of the Basque anthem Gernikako Arbola by, which is in zortziko rhythm, but he also quotes traditional zortziko melodies, as well as imitating their quintuple rhythms, in the opening "Ouverture sur des thèmes populaires basques" as well as in the "Rapsodie basque" that serves as an interlude between the first and second tableaux of act 2. Pierné, who was attracted to quintuple meter as part of a broader taste for exoticism, also employed quintuple meter in his Piano Quintet, Op. 41, and in the Fantaisie basque, Op. 49, for violin and orchestra. The outer sections of the second movement of the Quintet are in time, and marked "Sur une rythme de Zortzico", while the contrasting central section superimposes on time, in "quadruple quintuple" meter. In the Fantaisie, a long section near the beginning is in time, and is marked "Rythme de Zortzico".
Igor Stravinsky's name is often associated with rhythmic innovation in the 20th century, and quintuple meter is sometimes found in his music—for example, the fugato variation in the second movement of his Octet is written almost uniformly in time. Much more characteristically, however, quintuple bars in Stravinsky's scores are found in a context of constantly changing meters, as for example in his ballet The Rite of Spring, where the object appears to be the combination of two- and three-note subdivisions in irregular groupings.
This treatment of rhythm subsequently became so habitual for Stravinsky that, when he composed his Symphony in C in 1938–40, he found it worth observing that the first movement had no changes of meter at all.
So many other composers followed Stravinsky's example in the use of irregular meters that the occasional occurrence of quintuple-time bars becomes unremarkable from the 1920s onward. Entire movements with a constant five-to-a-bar rhythm are less-often encountered. An example is the second-movement "Lament" of the Double Concerto for Two Violins and Orchestra, Op. 49, by Gustav Holst. One particularly notable pre–World War II quintuple-meter composition is the popular first movement, "Aria ", of the Bachianas Brasileiras no. 5 by Heitor Villa-Lobos. The opening and closing parts of this aria for soprano and orchestra of cellos is predominantly in, and the middle section is entirely in that meter. The Ludus Tonalis by Hindemith has several instances of quintuple meter. Its Preludium and retrograde-inverted Postludium each have a Solenne, largo section in. Fugue II in G is in, and though Fugue VIII in D is notated in, its music is predominantly in, so shifts one beat forward each measure with respect to its notated meter. The Passacaglia for piano by Walter Piston is in quintuple meter.
In the post-war period, Gian Carlo Menotti used a quintuple-meter funeral march as an instrumental transition to the final scene of his opera The Consul, and Benjamin Britten set "Green Leaves Are We, Red Rose Our Golden Queen", the opening chorus from his opera Gloriana, Op. 53, in time. Dmitri Shostakovich set Fugues 12, 17, and 19 from his Twenty-Four Preludes and Fugues for piano, Op. 87 entirely in time, and also interspersed this time signature with other meters in Preludes 9, 20, and 24, and in Fugues 15 and 16 from the same collection.
Quintuple meter is sometimes employed to characterize particular variations of works in variation form. Examples include the third movement, "Variations on a Ground", from the Double Concerto for Two Violins and Orchestra, Op. 49, by Gustav Holst, "Variation IV: Più mosso", in Part I of The Age of Anxiety: Symphony No. 2 by Leonard Bernstein. Britten composed his Canticle III , Op. 55, in variation form, with the "Theme", "Variation IV", and "Variation VI" all in. In a similar fashion, extended single-movement compositions may set off large sections by using contrasting meters. Quintuple meter is used in this way by Rob du Bois in his Concerto for Two Violins and Orchestra, where bars 160–75 and 227–77 are in.
In the minimal music that emerged in the late 1960s, quintuple meter is not often encountered. A rare exception is found in an early work by Steve Reich, Reed Phase, which is built on the constant repetition of a five-note basic unit in steady quavers.

Reich was not satisfied with the result, largely because of the failure of the meter to produce the kind of rhythmic ambiguity found in the 12-beat patterns he came to favour:
Reich's 1979 Octet is entirely in quintuple time.

Jazz and popular music

Musical theatre

Until after the Second World War, quintuple time was virtually unheard of in the American genres of jazz and popular music. When in 1944, Stravinsky was commissioned by Billy Rose to compose a fifteen-minute dance component to be incorporated into his Broadway revue, The Seven Lively Arts, Stravinsky composed Scènes de ballet, to be choreographed by Anton Dolin. Rose was enthusiastic about the new score when initially he saw the piano reduction made by Ingolf Dahl, but later was dismayed by the sound of the orchestra, and offended the composer by telegraphing the suggestion that Stravinsky should allow the scoring to be "retouched" by Robert Russell Bennett, who "orchestrates even the works of Cole Porter". Whole sections of the score had to be cut for the Philadelphia premiere, because the New York pit musicians, accustomed to the conventions of Broadway musicals of that period, were unable to manage the bars that feature in Stravinsky's score.
A dozen years later, things were changing in musical theater in New York. Leonard Bernstein's Candide opened on Broadway in December 1956, and featured a variety of meters that Billy Rose's musicians would have found as impossible as Stravinsky's. In act 1, the quartet "Universal Good" is a chorale in time, and the main verses of "Ballad of Eldorado" in act 2 are in, with turnarounds in or +. Mary Rodgers's 1959 Once Upon a Mattress featured the song "Sensitivity". Later examples in musical theater include the song "Everything's Alright", from Jesus Christ Superstar, by Andrew Lloyd Webber, which is mainly in, and "Ladies in Their Sensitivities" from Stephen Sondheim's , which is in. Sondheim also alternates with and and in the song "In Buddy's Eyes' from Follies.

Jazz

In 1959, the Dave Brubeck Quartet released Time Out, a jazz album with music in unusual meters. It included Paul Desmond's "Take Five", in time. Brubeck had studied with the French composer Darius Milhaud, who in turn had been strongly influenced by Stravinsky, and is credited with the systematic introduction of asymmetrical and shifting rhythms that sparked a far-reaching surge of interest in jazz and popular music in the 1960s.
Starting in 1964, the trumpeter and band leader Don Ellis sought to fuse traditional big-band styles with rhythms borrowed from Indian, Near Eastern music, and Balkan music. For example, one of his largest works, Variations for Trumpet, is divided into six sections with meters including,,, and. Two other Ellis compositions are entirely in time: "Indian Lady" and "5/4 Getaway".
In 1966, the popular American television drama series began a seven-season run with the "" by Lalo Schifrin, who also composed the "Tar Sequence" for the motion picture Cool Hand Luke.

Rock

In the late 1960s, quintuple meters began to appear with some frequency in rock-music contexts as well, where exploration of meters other than became one of the hallmarks of progressive rock. One of the earliest examples is "Grim Reaper of Love" by The Turtles. Another early example is "Within You Without You" by George Harrison, recorded on The Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band LP of 1967. In the next two years, meter occurred in another Beatles song by John Lennon and Paul McCartney: "Happiness Is a Warm Gun". The Byrds' LP The Notorious Byrd Brothers contained two songs using quintuple meter, "Get to You" and "Tribal Gathering".
Under the spell of Brubeck, Keith Emerson of Emerson, Lake & Palmer began exploring unusual meters at about this same time. His first quintuple-meter piece was "Azrael, the Angel of Death", written in 1968, and the meter cropped up again three years later in the opening instrumental section, "Eruption", of the title track and some later passages from the album Tarkus. Frank Zappa frequently played in 5; two specific documented examples are "Flower Punk" from 1968 and "Five Five Five". Zappa even had a hand signal with which he could cue the band to quickly switch into a quintuple meter at any time during a live performance.

Other examples in popular music