When they’re very little, they don’t have a rhythm,
do they? That’s what makes them so adorable.
They just teeter around, crawling or cruising
from bar to bar, flitting from major to minor at the
drop of a biscuit.
Then when they get a bit older, they start
whirring around, chattering a random collection of
hemi-demi-semiquavers, glissando-ing up and down
and fluttering like tiny detached grace notes around
the park.
But eventually, of course, you expect them to
settle down. It’s sad, admittedly, to see them having
to learn to live at less than hey, presto speed, and to
see them having to sometimes find out the hard
way about bar lines and repeats.
But learn they must. We all did.
My wife Alice and I both kept time from an early
age. It had come naturally to us. So it was no surprise
to us when our daughter, Sophie, began to keep time
at about the same time that she learned to talk. She
was already in four beats to the bar by the time she
started school. People sometimes don’t believe me
and say that she must have still been adding the odd
stray asynchronous quaver, being so young.
But by the time Sophie was sixteen, she was
living comfortably and steadily in perfect common
time. We were so proud.
Of course, we hadn’t been ready for when
Sophie started experimenting with syncopation
without our knowledge. I suppose they all have to
go through it. But that way of living on the offbeat
had never been for us, and we could only hope that
Sophie would eventually decide the same, for
herself.
Eventually, she did, and now Alice and I admire
the amount of grace notes and flourishes within
Sophie’s rhythm. She’s found a way of keeping time
like everyone else, but manages to express her
individuality without losing the beat. She’s a clever
girl.
No, we had no problem with Sophie. Our
problem was with our son, Dan.
At first we thought that Dan was just too young.
We didn’t worry that he didn’t seem to be keeping
time. We did all the things that parents do to
encourage his development: introducing him to
books at an early age, attending a toddler gym, that
sort of thing. Dan loved it all, but we began to
worry when Dan started school and we could still
see no sign that he was beginning to live in
four/four time.
For a while, Alice (it’s always the mums who
notice things first, isn’t it?) became convinced that Dan was living in rhythm. It just wasn’t obvious,
she said, it wasn’t completely clear where the bar
lines were.
She sought advice from other mums, one of
whom suggested that Dan was just dotting his
notes. It gave him an unexpected lilt, she said, and
that was what was stopping him from keeping time.
‘He’ll grow out of it,’ she said.
But as Dan entered his teens, we just could not
see a proper steady rhythm in his life into which bar
lines could be fitted, even if we allowed for him
dotting his notes. It didn’t seem to worry Dan, but
as a parent it was very hard to watch.
One day I got out of work early and I went to
pick Dan up from school. I could see that all of the
children who streamed out of the school gates,
laughing and chatting with each other, were in
perfect four/four. A lot were on the offbeat, of
course, being rebellious teenagers, but they were
still in time.
And then I spotted Dan. He chatted to a few
other lads, and even joined in with a playful scuffle
around a football for a few minutes. But even so, as
I watched him side by side with his peers, it was
obvious to me that he just did not keep to the beat
the way they did. He was utterly out of sync. I
simply couldn’t understand it.
He greeted me with a big smile as usual. Dan
was always a happy, cheerful lad. Very kind too, exceptionally so. But that day I knew that there was
something wrong that we just couldn’t ignore any
more.
Alice and I decided that we should take Dan to
see someone. There wasn’t a lot of choice about
who to see in those days. We went to someone who
we were told could help us.
Mr Oswald, his name was. He had a wispy white
beard and a slightly odd manner. I wasn’t reassured
by his rather slow two crotchets to a bar. It seemed
to me like he was only just keeping time himself.
He spent some time alone with Dan, talking to
him and asking him questions. Then he called us in,
and asked us lots of questions too. Had Dan
seemed overly chromatic when he was young? Did
he modulate easily? Would we say he tended
towards mezzo forte, forte or fortissimo?
We answered the questions as best we could.
A lot of them we’d never really thought about
before, so it wasn’t easy. We’d always been so
concerned about timing that we’d not really
thought much about everything else. It made us
feel a little guilty.
Eventually, Mr Oswald sat back at his desk and
took off his glasses. He rubbed his hands over his
eyes, replaced his glasses, and then leaned towards
us with his elbows on his desk and his hands
clasped together, as if in prayer.
‘This is what I see, Mr and Mrs Johnson,’ he said. ‘It is not that Dan is unable to keep time. That
is not the issue.’
‘But if he can keep time, why doesn’t he?’ asked
Alice, desperately.
‘Ah, but he does,’ said Mr Oswald. His hands
ceased to pray and instead he sat hand to hand,
fingertip to fingertip. ‘But you see, Dan does not
keep common time. Mr and Mrs Johnson, Dan
lives in three beats to a bar.’
‘Triple meter?’ gasped Alice, aghast.
‘Yes,’ confirmed Mr Oswald. ‘Triple meter.
Waltz time.’
‘My son is a Non-Marcher?’ I said, before I
could stop myself.
‘But why? Have we… did we… do something
wrong?’ asked Alice, wringing her hands.
‘No, Mrs Johnson, of course not,’ Mr Oswald
said. ‘We’re not sure what causes people to be this
way, but it’s certainly not a result of anything you
have or haven’t done.’ He peered at me over his
glasses. ‘And we don’t really use the term ‘NonMarcher’ any more, Mr Johnson.’
I gave him an embarrassed nod, without meeting
his gaze.
‘But what can we do?’ Alice persisted. ‘Maybe
we should pay for Dan to see a professional
conductor?’
Mr Oswald shook his head. ‘Dan is as he is. You
won’t be able to change him. Your efforts are best spent on helping Dan to cope in a world which
marches while he needs to waltz.’
‘Mazurka,’ Dan said, suddenly. We’d almost
forgotten he was there.
‘What was that, son?’ I asked, forcing myself to
sound cheerful. ‘What did you say?’
‘Mazurka,’ repeated Dan.
‘Yes, Dan. Mazurka,’ said Mr Oswald, turning to
look at Dan with patient, professional
understanding. ‘Triple meter, accent on the second
or third beat of the bar.’
Alice stood up. She looked pale. ‘I’m sorry,’ she
said, her face beginning to crumple. ‘This is too
much, too much to take in all at once, I—’
‘Of course, Mrs Johnson,’ Mr Oswald said,
rising from his seat. ‘I understand. Maybe it’s better
that you all go home now, and discuss what you
have learnt.’
We went home, but I have to be honest. We
didn’t discuss anything, not with Dan, and not with
each other. I think we hoped that it would all just
go away. But from then on, whenever I looked at
Dan, it was obvious. Three/ four time. It was
unmistakable, once you weren’t trying to slot
everything between four/four bar lines.
We were in denial, of course. I could see Alice
looking at Dan, and I knew what she was thinking.
She was thinking that if you could just slip in a
crotchet rest before the bar line, you’d have your four beats, and Dan would be just like everyone
else. But of course life is not that simple.
I have to confess that I coped very badly with it
all. Our son, three beats to a bar! Not four. Not
even two. Just three. I didn’t want to accept it.
I’m ashamed to say that sometimes I even put
off going home, and went to the pub after work
instead. I sat at the bar on my own, and the only
person I spoke to was the barmaid, to order a pint.
The barmaid was a beautiful young woman
called Shelley. She was very friendly, too. Eventually
I would do more than order my pint from her. We
would talk, chat and laugh. She was a wonderful,
witty, special woman. I don’t like to admit it, but
the truth is, I found myself very attracted by the
fact that she was so different from Alice. Something
about her seemed to sparkle as she stood among
the optics. When I spent time at the bar with her, I
felt that I could forget all my troubles.
Then one evening, a couple of pints in, I ended
up telling her all about Dan. I thought she’d be
sympathetic. But she just looked at me. And then
she threw her head back and laughed the most
beautiful and the most musical laugh I’ve ever
heard. And suddenly, it hit me.
‘You live in three/four, don’t you, Shelley?’ I
said, quietly.
Shelley shook her head. ‘No, love,’ she said.
‘Not three four. Six/eight.’
My mouth dropped open. ‘Compound time?’
‘Of course!’ she said, grinning. ‘We can’t all be
plodders to a strict four/four, can we? Where
would the joy be in that?’
I was speechless, and more than a little
embarrassed. Eventually, I managed to say,
‘Another pint please, Shelley.’ She served me my
pint and winked at me. I drank my pint and then
said goodbye. Shelley gave me a cheery wave. I
think she knew I wouldn’t be back.
I went home and sat down with Alice, and for
the first time, I started to talk to her about Dan. I
told her about Shelley. Not everything, of course,
just that I’d met someone who was very nice and
very happy who lived in triple meter. I said that
maybe we should start to think about accepting
how Dan was, and about how we could help him.
Alice brushed a lock of greying hair from her
face, and glared at me. It was the first time that I’d
even noticed that she had any grey hairs. ‘I have
started accepting it, Percy,’ she said. ‘If you’d been
home a bit more you might have noticed. I’ve been
meeting up with other mothers, who all have
children who don’t keep to four/four. They’re all
special, wonderful children, and so is our son.’
‘I know that, Alice,’ I said. ‘I know he’s special.’
‘Do you?’ asked Alice, accusingly. ‘Have you
ever tried to look at him, listen to him, and see
beyond his bar lines? Have you ever listened to his harmony? His chords? Do you even know,’ she
continued, angrily crushing a runaway tear on her
cheek with the palm of her hand, ‘how complex his
harmonies are, already, before he’s even turned
eighteen?’
I bowed my head. I didn’t know. I hadn’t
looked. I hadn’t listened. I hadn’t spent any time at
all getting to know my son.
Dan came into the room. He went over and
turned on the telly and sat on the sofa. I went and
sat next to him. For the first time, I looked at him.
Not just at where his bar lines were, but at him.
And in that moment, I noticed things that I just
hadn’t been aware of before. Beautiful harmonies.
Something that I’d always dismissed before as illtimed discord, which turned out, once I paid
attention, to be cleverly resolved dissonance. And
from that moment on, my own life felt more
comfortably in time than it had ever been. And
everything about being Dan’s father began to get
easier.
I know. This story probably seems a bit strange to
you, now. Nowadays, you come across lots of
people in triple meter, compound time, or even
mixed time. People are not dismissed, now, because
of how they tick. But it was different, then. People
had less knowledge, less understanding. Things had
only just started to get better for people like Dan when he was growing up. But I’m glad they did.
And I like to think that we played a role in that;
that we were a small part of that change. Because
we spoke up for Dan. We fought his corner. And
we began to speak up for others like him, too, and
to learn a bit more about three/four.
We helped Dan to learn to deal with the many
situations in life where everything is designed to be
dealt with in four. And that’s pretty much
everything, of course. Catching a bus. Meeting
someone new. Taking an exam. It’s all in
four/four.
Sometimes Dan had to just learn how to cope,
to compromise. Or, there were times when he
would get by because of his wonderful melody and
rich augmented chords. But sometimes, with our
help, and eventually without, Dan would be able to
change the beat completely, to fit his own. And
when that happened, I would always love to see
him whirl and waltz his way through to success,
while all the common-timers around him did their
best to keep up with him in three/four.
And when they did, they would often say how
much they’d learned, and how much they’d enjoyed
seeing the world through three to a bar, for a
change. So Dan was a pioneer, of sorts.
Of course they couldn’t keep it up for too long,
those common-timers, because that’s not how they
were made. At the end of the day, we can only keep our own beat, at our own tempo. That’s something
that Dan has taught me.
But although he’ll always be in three to a bar,
and I in four, when I look at the fine young man
that my son has become I can sometimes feel my
heart beating in triplets.
About the Author
Jacki Donnellan loves making music and making up
stories. She lives in the Netherlands and works at sailing
her family safely across the seas of expatriate life.
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