I'm still confused about 2/4 and 4/4... If you'll excuse the exaggeration in "terminology" is this correct:4/4: BANG tap tap tap; BANG tap tap tap;2/4: BANG tap bang tap; BANG tap bang tap;2/2: BANG tap; BANG tap; BANG tap;Thanks, T
That only works in countries where you call them quarter or eighth notes! Here I think we just learn that the top number is how many, and the bottom number what type, and at first students have to remember that 4 is crotchet, 2 is minim and 8 is quaver, then later on you can explain that the number relates to how many would fit into a semibreve.
Actually - I personally believe that it's better to educate them on the types of note lengths and their relationship to each other, BEFORE introducing time signatures. There's no point telling them that a time signature is THIS, if they don't correctly know what THIS is.
There is no difference between 2/4 and 2/2. In both there are two beats in a measure (BANG tap). Only in 2/4, the quarter note gets the beat, and in 2/2 the half note gets the beat.4/4 BANG tap Bang tap; BANG tap Bang tap; 4/8 BANG tap Bang tap; BANG tap Bang tap; (eighth note gets the beat)2/4 BANG tap; BANG tap2/2 BANG tap; BANG tap (half note gets the beat: each bang or tap is a half note)
Bestway to explain time signature...
I'd assume that before you tell someone that the measure has 4 quarter notes or 3 crotchets per bar, that the person would have learned what a quarter note or crotchet was.