Beat  

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-"It's the [[Beat (music)|beat]], the beat, the beat that makes you want to [[Rock music|rock]]." -- "[[Jazzy Rhythm]]", [[Michelle Wallace]] +"It's the [[Beat (music)|beat]], the beat, the beat that makes you want to [[Rock music|rock]]." -- "[[Jazzy Rhythm]]", [[North End (band)|Michelle Wallace]]
<hr> <hr>
[[Afrobeat]] - ''[[Ultimate Breaks and Beats]]'' - [[broken beat]]s - [[Beat Generation]] - [[dance]] - [[drum]]s - [[Groove (music)|groove]] - [[New Beat]] - [[rhythm]] - [[riddim]]s'' [[Afrobeat]] - ''[[Ultimate Breaks and Beats]]'' - [[broken beat]]s - [[Beat Generation]] - [[dance]] - [[drum]]s - [[Groove (music)|groove]] - [[New Beat]] - [[rhythm]] - [[riddim]]s''

Revision as of 14:32, 16 November 2017

"It's the beat, the beat, the beat that makes you want to rock." -- "Jazzy Rhythm", Michelle Wallace


Afrobeat - Ultimate Breaks and Beats - broken beats - Beat Generation - dance - drums - groove - New Beat - rhythm - riddims

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From Middle English beten, from Old English bēatan (“to beat, pound, strike, lash, dash, thrust, hurt, injure”), from Proto-Germanic *bautaną (“to push, strike”), from Proto-Indo-European *bʰew- (“to hit, strike”) (compare Old Irish fo·botha (“he threatened”), Latin confutō (“I strike down”), fūstis (“stick, club”), Albanian bahe (“sling”), Lithuanian baudžiù, Old Armenian բութ (butʿ)).

Contents

Dictionary

  1. A pulsation or throb.
  2. A pulse on the beat level, the metric level at which pulses are heard as the basic unit. Thus a beat is the basic time unit of a piece.
  3. A rhythm.
  4. The interference between two tones of almost equal frequency
  5. A pause with the camera focused on one shot, often a characters face (often used in screenplays/teleplays).
  6. The route of a patrol by a guard or officer as in walk the beat.
  7. In newspapering, the primary focus of a reporter's stories (such as police/courts, education, city government, business, etc.).
  8. A small part of a dramatic play.

Beat or beats may refer to:

Common meanings

  • Strike (attack), repeatedly striking a person or object
  • Beat (police), the territory and time that a police officer patrols
  • Gay beat, an area frequented by men who have sex with men for the purpose of casual sex

Film

Music

  • Beat (acoustics), volume fluctuations due to interference between sounds of different frequencies
  • Beat (music), the basic time unit or pulse in a piece of music representing one moment in time, or a segment of rhythm or cadence
  • Beat music, a rock music genre that developed in the United Kingdom in the early 1960s
  • Pulse (music), in music and music theory, beats in a (repeating) series of identical yet distinct periodic short-duration stimuli perceived as points in time occurring at the mensural level

Other uses in culture

See also





Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Beat" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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