Syncopation in a sentence as a noun

I can't put my finger on it but I think it was more than just the narrators syncopation.

The amount of unheard details that comes to you, tone, rhythm, harmony, texture, syncopation... And even playing.

It looks really awesome but the syncopation of the song makes really hard to play along, I would love to see someone who is good do this though!

It makes the Beasties' syncopation feel wickedly subversive.

I don't have to like Picasso to appreciate it, just as I don't have to like jazz to appreciate the beauty in syncopation.

It's really hard to annotate music with syncopation, pitch bends, and fluid rhythms unless you already have the song in your head — and even then, it takes forever.

Recorded music is not mentioned, blues tonality is not mentioned, there is no theory of groove or syncopation, and there's nothing about lyrics.

This opens the door to syncopation, polyrhythms and musical creativity, which occurs on a more primal level in the brain than harmony.

In western music you can usually find it art music, film soundtracks, jazz, IDM, progressive rock... With well placed accents and syncopation I don't think it's that bothersome to the untrained ear even.

Sheet music is a great format to represent classical music, but the fact that it doesn't allow you to easily notate one of the most common elements of modern music — syncopation — points to the fact that it's out of date for today's needs by about a century.

First, it is on a far more elementary level than that found in the Diophantine problems and, second, the algebra of al-Khowarizmi is thoroughly rhetorical, with none of the syncopation found in the Greek Arithmetica or in Brahmagupta's work.

It is quite unlikely that al-Khwarizmi knew of the work of Diophantus, but he must have been familiar with at least the astronomical and computational portions of Brahmagupta; yet neither al-Khwarizmi nor other Arabic scholars made use of syncopation or of negative numbers.

Syncopation definitions

noun

(phonology) the loss of sounds from within a word (as in `fo'c'sle' for `forecastle')

See also: syncope

noun

a musical rhythm accenting a normally weak beat

noun

music (especially dance music) that has a syncopated rhythm