7

I’m in common time (4/4) and I have a pickup measure with only a quarter note in it. Should it have a measure number?

Elements in Space
  • 10,785
  • 2
  • 23
  • 67
Andrew
  • 451
  • 2
  • 9
  • 4
    The answer is definitely "no". Unfortunately, much free sheet music is created with badly programmed software that thinks it is "yes", but you shouldn't let that mislead you. – Kilian Foth Mar 22 '20 at 08:11
  • 2
    If you really want to give it number, give it a zero. – Elements in Space Mar 24 '20 at 13:12
  • 1
    Not an answer, just an observation. In my version of Finale, the pickup measure IS NOT counted in the measure numbering process. However, it IS COUNTED if defining the number of measures wanted in the first staff!!! – Jim Canty Jun 19 '22 at 17:22

3 Answers3

12

No, a pickup measure will not be counted as measure 1 in a score. Instead, the first full measure following the pickup will be labeled as measure 1.

But it's not that this pickup will never be counted; traditionally, the last measure of a piece will have the duration of the pickup subtracted from its total duration. As such, the final measure will be counted, and the pickup ultimately is counted as a part of that final measure.

Richard
  • 82,618
  • 16
  • 186
  • 360
  • 2
    Put simply, anything but a full bar is the anacrucis, so won't be bar 1. Even if it's a virtually full bar with only a quaver rest and 3 1/2 beats worth of notes. – Tim Mar 22 '20 at 07:51
  • Can you clarify - it seems there's a school of thought that believes that if the '1st' bar *is* written as a full bar, with the appropriate rests, then that is in fact bar 1. (as in a crotchet anacrucis written as a bar with 3 crotchet rests and a note). Which then might mess up the end of that section! – Tim Mar 22 '20 at 08:47
  • 1
    Is there any benefit, other than tradition, for making the last measure a partial measure when there's a pickup partial-measure? – Greg Martin Mar 22 '20 at 19:18
  • 2
    @GregMartin - often, there is a repeat of that section (verse 2, for example) so having the 1st and last bars add up to 1 bar is easier and tidier. Mostly convention, but it sort of makes more sense that way. – Tim Mar 23 '20 at 09:01
  • 1
    In simple dance-form music, where there may be a 'DC al fine' repeat structure, it makes sense to borrow the upbeat from the length of the last written bar. We see a lot of this sort of music in our early years of music education, it's easy to analyse and easy to play. So we may pick up a distorted impression that what is appropriate in a Bach suite is the 'rule' for all music. It isn't! – Laurence Jun 19 '22 at 21:15
6

No. Pickup measures by definition are partial measures and do not count as "bar no. 1" or the "first measure."

However, if your "pickup" measure is actually a full measure with rests in the first beat(s) then yes, that would be the first full "measure" of the song.

Don't forget to add the remaining beats of that pick-up measure to the end of your score. If your pickup measure has one beat, then your final bar should have three beats (in 4|4 time as stated by the OP).

enter image description here

NickGrooves
  • 1,619
  • 5
  • 21
  • This seems like a contradiction! – Tim Mar 22 '20 at 07:48
  • Is there any benefit, other than tradition, for making the last measure a partial measure when there's a pickup partial-measure? – Greg Martin Mar 22 '20 at 19:18
  • @Tim What do you believe is a contradiction? Please be more specific. – NickGrooves Mar 23 '20 at 08:04
  • Are you saying that if a pick-up bar is a full bar, then it's bar 1? Is it still a pick-up bar then? That's my confusion. – Tim Mar 23 '20 at 08:08
  • @Tim Ah ok I should've put the term "pick-up bar" inside quotation marks. A full measure is a measure that has all the beats of its time signature. If the OP's work in 4|4 time begins with a "bar" of four beats, then that would be counted as "measure 1" or bar 1. The correct use of the term "pick up bar" is a partial / incomplete measure, as I explain in the beginning of my answer. – NickGrooves Mar 23 '20 at 08:27
  • I'm still out as a jury there - hence my comment on Richard's answer. He would know! – Tim Mar 23 '20 at 09:02
  • 1
    @Tim Sorry you don't have the same faith in my answer. For what it's worth, I've been teaching 20+ years and the Royal Conservatory of Music's theory exam and Sibelius (the software notation app) agree with me. – NickGrooves Mar 23 '20 at 09:33
  • 1
    What you state may well be correct. I've taught music for 50+ yrs, and still have a lot to learn. Exam board-wise, ABRSM only recognised natural minor scales a few years ago, so exam -wise isn't maybe that good proof, but I don't want to go further! I'll wait and see. Right or wrong, just want answers! – Tim Mar 23 '20 at 09:40
  • I'm thinking of something like Santana's "Smooth". Bar 1 has the musical effect of a pickup bar, but it is a full bar. I suppose calling it bar 1 is just fine, and the "pickup" effect would be marked by putting a double bar line right after. But I would not argue with anyone who treated it as a pickup. – Edward Jun 19 '22 at 21:21
1

Only if it's a full measure. So if you've got a half rest, an eighth rest, and then a beat and a half of pickup notes, it counts. If you just lead in with a beat and a half of pickup notes, the first numbered measure is the next one.

Tom Serb
  • 4,757
  • 7
  • 22