What 6/8 means
6/8 is a time signature with six eighth-note positions in each bar. The top number, 6, tells you there are six written eighth-note counts per measure. The bottom number, 8, tells you the written counting unit is the eighth note.
In most music, 6/8 is felt as compound duple meter: two main beats per bar, and each main beat divides into three eighth notes. Those two main beats are usually dotted quarter notes.
The bottom number does not set the tempo. A piece in 6/8 can be slow, medium, or fast. The tempo marking tells you how fast the pulse moves.
How 6/8 feels
6/8 often feels like a rolling two-beat pattern:
ONE two three FOUR five six
The strongest accent is usually on 1, with a secondary accent on 4. That gives the bar two large pulses:
1 2 3 | 4 5 6
If you tap your foot twice per bar, you are likely feeling the dotted-quarter pulse: beat 1 covers eighth notes 1-2-3, and beat 2 covers eighth notes 4-5-6.
This is different from simply counting six equal clicks with no shape. In 6/8, the grouping matters. The music usually leans forward in two broad waves rather than six separate steps.
At a slow dotted-quarter tempo, such as 50-60 bpm, you may hear all six eighth-note positions clearly. At a quicker dotted-quarter tempo, such as 110-130 bpm, many players feel mostly the two large pulses and let the inner subdivisions roll underneath.
How to count 6/8
A basic spoken count is:
1 2 3 4 5 6
Accented, it becomes:
ONE two three FOUR five six
Many musicians count the two main beats like triplet subdivisions:
1 la li 2 la li
In this system, la and li are syllables for the second and third eighth-note subdivisions inside each dotted-quarter beat.
You may also hear:
1-trip-let 2-trip-let
Use the version that helps you feel two big beats instead of six disconnected eighth notes. For a drummer, a simple practice groove might place kick on 1, snare or accent on 4, and steady eighth notes across all six positions.
Common accent groupings
The standard 6/8 grouping is:
3 + 3
That means the six eighth notes are grouped as two sets of three:
1 2 3 | 4 5 6
This is the most important grouping for 6/8 because it creates the compound duple feel: two beats, each split into three.
Musicians may also use a temporary 2 + 2 + 2 accent pattern:
1 2 | 3 4 | 5 6
This creates a cross-accent or hemiola-like effect against the normal 3 + 3 feel. It can make the bar sound like three smaller pulses instead of two larger ones.
In slower music, players may feel all six eighth-note positions more clearly. In faster music, the two dotted-quarter pulses usually become the main thing you feel.
Where musicians use it
6/8 appears in many styles, including folk dance tunes such as jigs, marches, hymns, ballads, pop and rock songs, musical theater, classical music, and some groove-based music.
For rhythm section players, the key is deciding whether the groove should emphasize the two big pulses or the six smaller subdivisions. A bassist might outline the dotted-quarter pulse, while a guitarist or pianist plays a rolling pattern across the six eighth notes.
Singers often feel 6/8 naturally because the meter supports long phrases with a gentle forward lift. Drummers often use cymbal, shaker, or hi-hat patterns to make the triplet subdivision clear.
Common confusions
6/8 vs 3/4: 3/4 has three quarter-note beats per bar: 1 2 3. 6/8 usually has two dotted-quarter beats per bar: 1 la li 2 la li. Both can contain six eighth notes on paper, but the felt pulse is different.
6/8 vs 6/4: 6/4 has six quarter-note counts per bar. It might be counted as 1 2 3 4 5 6 in quarter-note pulses, or felt as 1 2 3 | 4 5 6 when grouped into two larger units. 6/8 uses eighth-note positions and commonly feels like two dotted-quarter beats.
6/8 vs 12/8: 6/8 has two dotted-quarter beats per bar. 12/8 usually has four dotted-quarter beats per bar. A 12/8 blues or ballad feel often counts like 1 la li 2 la li 3 la li 4 la li.
6/8 vs triplets in 2/4 or 4/4: A bar of 2/4 with triplets can sound similar to 6/8 because both may contain two beats divided into three. The notation depends on how the phrase, accents, and larger musical structure are organized.
The 8 does not mean eighth note equals the beat: In 6/8, the written eighth note is the counting unit, but the felt beat is often the dotted quarter note.
Practice with a metronome
- Set the metronome to a moderate tempo, such as 70 bpm, and let each click represent a dotted-quarter beat. Count 1 la li 2 la li, with clicks on 1 and 2. If you are counting 1 2 3 4 5 6, those same clicks land on 1 and 4.
- Clap or play six even eighth notes per bar while keeping the accents on 1 and 4: ONE two three FOUR five six.
- Add a simple groove. For example, tap your foot on 1 and 4, clap on 1 and 4, and make the clap on 4 slightly stronger if you want a backbeat-style lift.
- Switch the metronome so it clicks every eighth note. Count 1 2 3 4 5 6, then reduce the click back to the two dotted-quarter pulses without losing the subdivision.
- Try a cross-accent exercise: keep counting 6/8 as 1 2 3 4 5 6, but clap accents on 1, 3, and 5. Then return to accents on 1 and 4 to feel the difference between 2 + 2 + 2 and 3 + 3.
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