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Natasha Tori Maru

Rhythm vs Melody

Music: Rhythm or Melody?   6 members have voted

  1. 1. Do you notice rhythm or melody first?

    • Melody
      0
    • Rhythm
      3
    • Both/Depends on the genre/song
      3

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10 posts in this topic

What makes the first impression on you when listening to a tune, rhythm or melody? 

Do you play music, or dance? 

Many dancers and drummers I know tend toward noticing rhythm first, movement & beat. Other musicians hear the emotional crescendos of the melody & sequential pitches. I do not know if there is any pattern to be found here.

I am a dancer and only ever learned some drums and a touch of bass guitar (rhythm). I have always heard the beat and rhythm first. It catches me before the melody. 

I feel the beat in my body as movement, I feel the melody as an emotional weight in my chest and heart 😃


It is far easier to fool someone, than to convince them they have been fooled.

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For me rhythm definitely is the foundation or driving swing of music.  This is one reason I'm not a huge fan of classical music, although some classical music has rhythm like Bach.  Rhythm, form, time.  Then melody lays on top of the rhythm as the voice.  Rhythm without melody doesn't seem to go anywhere.  Melody without rhythm is boring.

Edited by Joseph Maynor

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29 minutes ago, Joseph Maynor said:

Rhythm without melody doesn't seem to go anywhere.  Melody without rhythm is boring.

I feel this symbiosis in the way you describe. 

I think I like jazz for this reason, I feel more rhythm in it (although, this could be more perception). The swing-feel, unique articulation and syncopation really capture me. While I enjoy the melodic improvisation essential to the genre, I really feel it is the rhythmic approach that dictates how that melody is interpreted and phrased 😃

I love music!


It is far easier to fool someone, than to convince them they have been fooled.

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1 hour ago, Natasha Tori Maru said:

I feel this symbiosis in the way you describe. 

I think I like jazz for this reason, I feel more rhythm in it (although, this could be more perception). The swing-feel, unique articulation and syncopation really capture me. While I enjoy the melodic improvisation essential to the genre, I really feel it is the rhythmic approach that dictates how that melody is interpreted and phrased 😃

I love music!

 

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Melody is icing on the cake of rhythm. Melody needs rhythm so rhythm. All melody is is rhythm stopping.

Edited by Hojo

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On 1/31/2026 at 9:13 PM, Hojo said:

All melody is is rhythm stopping.

I see it more the opposite -- sometimes rhythm is melody stopping in its extreme.  Take a drum circle for example: That's just begging for melody and form.  But every melody seems to contain a bit of rhythm.  Even row row row your boat has some rhythm in it, even though it's primarily melody.

Edited by Joseph Maynor

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I like heavy classical musical and banging house music in equal measure. Throw in a bit of Jazz or 80's synth as well. Anyway, melody and rythmn.


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I am a dancer / musician you could say. I play multiple instruments like didgeridoo, native flutes, djembe and other drums, handpan, rattles, jew harp, clap sticks, tibetan bowls and many others. Nothing feels better than dancing tho, its something else.

Rhythm is like the foundation or roots, melody is like the shoots and fruits :) 

 


I am but a reflection... a mirror... of you... of me... in a cosmic dance ~ of a unified mystery...

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5 hours ago, Ramasta9 said:

I am a dancer / musician you could say. I play multiple instruments like didgeridoo, native flutes, djembe and other drums, handpan, rattles, jew harp, clap sticks, tibetan bowls and many others. Nothing feels better than dancing tho, its something else.

Rhythm is like the foundation or roots, melody is like the shoots and fruits :) 

 

Birds are natural musicians.  You know this.  When I was learning how to play Jazz I would go to the forest and improvise with the birds.  You can get them to respect form too, they'll get it.  Like you start playing a twelve bar chorus over and over and they will join in and get the structure almost immediately.  But also, I felt like I was imposing myself on their jam session which is ongoing by default.

 

Edited by Joseph Maynor

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2 hours ago, Joseph Maynor said:

Birds are natural musicians.  You know this.  When I was learning how to play Jazz I would go to the forest and improvise with the birds.  You can get them to respect form too, they'll get it.  Like you start playing a twelve bar chorus over and over and they will join in and get the structure almost immediately.  But also, I felt like I was imposing myself on their jam session which is ongoing by default.

 

Yess ! I especially enjoy playing in nature. That's a big inspiration for me one day, to create sound healing spaces in nature for people to come and bath amongst nature wildlife and healing instruments and sounds :) I especially enjoy the native american flute with birds communicating in between.

 


I am but a reflection... a mirror... of you... of me... in a cosmic dance ~ of a unified mystery...

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