Rhythm - or stress, or beat, or pulse - is essential when speaking languages - especially English:
Jay Doubleyou: the basics of music
It's a basic part of music:
How Music Works with Howard Goodall - 02 - Rhythm (Full Show) - YouTube
And it's very much about the music of the [English] language:
Jay Doubleyou: rhyme rhythm repeat: the cumulative song or tale: "this is the house that jack built"
Jay Doubleyou: a curvaceous young phoneme called schwa...
With A Little Help From My Friends - YouTube and JOE COCKER With A Little Help From My Friends 1969 Woodstock - YouTube
And all of this will help students to speak with a 'natural rhythm' in English:
Jay Doubleyou: sound scripting
But what about other rhythms?
Rhythmic mode | African drumming, Polyrhythms & Syncopation | Britannica
With a bit of explanation:
Looking at More Complex Polyrhythms - Music Theory Crash Course - YouTube
New Horizons in Music: Polyrhythms | Loop - YouTube
Songs that use Polyrhythms & Polymeters - YouTube
And some examples from popular and folk music:
God Only Knows (Remastered 1999) - YouTube
Acapella Georgian Polyphonic Singing - YouTube
Tony Allen & Hypnotic Brass feat Baaba Mal - Ise Nla - LIVE@Broad Casting, London 29/01/09 - YouTube
Chaabi. That Moroccan groove that made you go WHHAAATTTTTT - YouTube
Mongo Santamaria - Afro Blue - YouTube
Butour Ngale - African polyrhythm demonstration - YouTube
And from jazz and classical:
Clapping Music (1972) / Steve Reich - YouTube
West Side Story - Cool (1961) HD - YouTube
West Side Story (4/10) Movie CLIP - America (1961) HD - YouTube
West Side Story ' Dance at the Gym ' Mambo 日本語字幕 - YouTube
And with different time signatures:
Dancing at Dusk — A moment with Pina Bausch'.. — Video | VK
Finally:
Jay Doubleyou: how classical music brings people together
And where to go next:
Jay Doubleyou: talking about music - on audio
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