put the 9 notes every 4 lines and the 4 notes every line notes and work out what you got.
Are you aiming for mathetmatical evenness here? 2/3 and 3/4 (3/2 or 4/3) are the easier ones to learn and so might be worth trying out a few of them before going into more difficult ones.There are loads of things online, such as repeated metronomes that tell you exactly where the notes go, and I watched a couple of Paul Barton / Josh Wright videos that explain it using words that may help you. Anyway here's the maths.Find the lowest common denominator (the lowest value that both numbers can be multipled into) between the two, draw that many even lines on a piece of paper and mark out where the notes would go.I don't know if these are common polyrhythms, this theory works much better for 2/3, 3/4 where the denominators are a bit easier to work with (2/3 is 6 and 3/4 is 12!) anyway, don't let the lines throw you off, they're just there to make sure your note spaces are even.9/5 is 45 (5x9 / 9x5) So as 9 goes into 45 5 times, the notes will be every 5 lines apart, and 5 goes into 45 9 times, so their notes will be 9 lines apart. (I haven't checked how this will look yet when I press post, if the formatting's buggered i'll attach as an image!1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I1 2 3 4 5 (please assume the numbers are supposed to be inline with the I's, something that's difficult to do on a computer, the 3 is off a tad!!) Next after this you may want to work out a sentence or something that works for you. I don't think you can really play stuff like this to the millisecond, but it hopefully maps out at least where the notes should goI think it can be handy to compare it to leg movements, so in this i'd say Jump, hop, trip, skip, skip, trip, hop. (notice after the jump the hop, trip, skip mirror each other)9/4 is 36 (4x9 / 9x4) so draw out 36 even lines, put the 9 notes every 4 lines and the 4 notes every line notes and work out what you got. Maybe do the metronome marks in a different colour so you can then start a metronome and tap these beats as you see them on the paper
Or there's my way...
I learn the right hand, perfectly. I learn the left hand, perfectly. Then I put them together. Instant polyrhythm. No thinking required. All the thinking comes in the one hand alone practice. fitting 5 notes or 7 notes in the time of 4, that requires a bit of fiddling to get it to come out right. I never used a metronome but I could have - my internal clock is that good. If your's is not, use a metronome for one hand practice. Get the odd rhythms done by the time the beat comes up. Then play them together the way you did, separately. See, your brain has two tracks now, instead of one.
So I'm working on this right now. And I learned it. But it took wayyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy longer than I had planned for, and I don't play it perfectly 9 vs 5 or 9 vs 4, but it goes fast enough I'm just like eh....they can't tell the difference LOL. But I'd like to fix that.Here's what I did:-Figure out what notes go in between what-Then try to make each part sound correctly-Try to make both parts sound correctly togetherYeah, that's not going so well LOL it takes forever.I'm thinking of trying (for the next polyrhythm I have to learn) to use a MIDI sample to get the idea, since it's mathematically perfect and all...How do you guys do polyrhythms? I'd like to use more in compositions, but I'd need to be able to play them, and Scriabin's 4th has a bunch of 5's and stuff...
Very well put, but I have information taught to me by my DMA teacher who learned it from his teacher Eugene Liszt. Here goes, and this (Freebee) methodology also applies to anything that is difficult in terms of note synchronization:1) Transpose everything to C Major because if you cannot play a particular passage on strictly white notes, then there is no way you can do it with black keys involved. Simply put, your brain does not have eyes, in terms of hand/eye coordination.2) Play both hand passages separately and then together in C Major. Then, do so again, emphasizing hands separately and then together from beginning to end.3) Then, play one hand against another (switching back and forth) using C Major and the actual notes of the other hand. Once you have mastered this, then you:4) Play both hands together using what your brain has taught you, and feel free to repeat this process many times over until it feels right!
How the heck to you transpose a passage in c minor, into C Major, considering that the 3rd bar of [15] has a B flat and B natural, not to mention the C sharp and c natural in the following bar...I'm rather curious...
So your replied during the middle of making your supper to reply that you can't reply fully...Quite odd...
You seem to be a tad touchy... I wasn't trying to disrespect you - it just seemed odd to post a reply saying, that you're in the middle of making supper and can't reply fully...When I was perfectly fine patiently waiting for a response from you. Posting to claim that you're making supper just seemed a little odd, but there was no disrespect intended. I was genuinely curious to see what your method of working on polyrhythms was...