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5/8

5/8 is a time signature with five eighth-note counts in each bar. The top number, 5, tells you there are five counted eighth-note units per measure. The bottom number, 8, tells you that the written counting unit is the eighth note.

5/8

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What 5/8 means

5/8 is a time signature with five eighth-note counts in each bar. The top number, 5, tells you there are five counted eighth-note units per measure. The bottom number, 8, tells you that the written counting unit is the eighth note.

The bottom number does not set the tempo. A piece in 5/8 can be slow, medium, or fast. The tempo marking and the way the music is grouped decide how quickly the meter feels.

Because five is not usually felt as equal, evenly stressed beats, 5/8 is an odd meter. Musicians normally feel it as an uneven combination of short and long groups, most often 2+3 or 3+2.

How 5/8 feels

5/8 often feels like a bar with one short part and one longer part. The short part has two eighth notes. The longer part has three eighth notes. That creates a lopsided, forward-moving pulse.

In a 2+3 grouping, the bar feels like short-long:

ONE two ONE two three

In a 3+2 grouping, it feels like long-short:

ONE two three ONE two

The beat in 5/8 is not always each individual eighth note. At faster tempos, players may feel two larger pulses per bar: one pulse for the group of 2 and one pulse for the group of 3. The group of 3 is longer, so the two pulses are uneven in length.

How to count 5/8

The simplest count is:

1 2 3 4 5

That count is useful when you are first learning where the barline is. But to make the meter musical, add the grouping accents.

For 2+3, count:

1 2 1 2 3

or:

ONE two ONE two three

For 3+2, count:

1 2 3 1 2

or:

ONE two three ONE two

If you are reading notation, keep track of all five eighth notes. If you are playing by feel, listen for the accents that reveal whether the bar is grouped 2+3, 3+2, or something more specific to the style.

Common accent groupings

The two most common 5/8 groupings are 2+3 and 3+2. Both have five eighth notes, but they produce different motion.

Grouping Count Basic feel
2+3 1 2 1 2 3 Short-long
3+2 1 2 3 1 2 Long-short

Some music may shift between these groupings, or use accents that do not fit neatly into either pattern. In some regional dance traditions, especially in parts of the Balkans, asymmetrical meters can have local names, steps, and phrasing that are more specific than a generic 2+3 label. Players and dancers may feel them as quick-slow or slow-quick steps rather than as abstract eighth-note math.

Where musicians use it

5/8 appears in progressive rock and metal, jazz fusion, contemporary classical music, film and game scoring, and some folk and dance traditions that use asymmetrical meters.

Drummers often show the meter by placing strong accents at the start of each group. For example, in 2+3, a kick or low drum might mark beat 1 of the group of 2 and beat 1 of the group of 3. Guitarists, bassists, and pianists may repeat a riff that clearly outlines the five-count cycle.

Singers and horn players often feel 5/8 through phrasing rather than counting every eighth note. A melody may naturally lean into short-long or long-short shapes, helping the band stay oriented.

Common confusions

5/8 is not the same as 5/4. Both have five as the top number, but 5/4 has five quarter-note counts per bar. 5/8 is usually felt in uneven eighth-note groups rather than five even quarter-note beats.

5/8 is not just fast 5/4. Tempo matters, but meter is about how beats and subdivisions are organized. A slow 5/8 and a fast 5/4 can still feel different because the written pulse and phrasing are different.

5/8 is not 6/8 with one note missing. 6/8 is commonly felt as two dotted-quarter beats, each divided into three eighth notes: ONE two three FOUR five six. 5/8 has five eighth notes and usually an uneven grouping, such as 2+3 or 3+2.

5/8 is not quintuplets. Quintuplets are five evenly spaced notes in the time normally occupied by another note value. 5/8 is a meter: it tells you how the measure is organized. The five eighth notes in 5/8 are normal eighth notes, not automatically tuplets.

Odd meter is not the same as syncopation. Syncopation accents unexpected parts of a meter. 5/8 changes the meter itself by making the bar five eighth notes long.

Practice with a metronome

  1. Set the metronome to a slow tempo, such as 80 bpm, with the click on every eighth note. Count 1 2 3 4 5 until the bar feels stable.
  2. Choose 2+3. Clap on the accents and count ONE two ONE two three. Keep the unaccented counts light but even.
  3. Switch to 3+2. Clap ONE two three ONE two. Notice how the same five eighth notes now lean in a different direction.
  4. Put the click only on the start of each bar. Count all five eighth notes internally and clap the grouping accents without rushing the group of 2 or dragging the group of 3.
  5. Create a one-bar riff. For example, play low notes on the accented counts and higher notes on the remaining counts. Repeat it for several minutes without adding or dropping an eighth note.

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