what do you mean?
also, my instructor just started teaching me a 4/6 time signature. So I'm going to be learning triplets a lot better.
you mean 6/4... right?
cos like... the first number is how many beats per bar, and the second, is the value of that beat, which is always measured in a power of 2. so for example:
3/4 <---classic waltz
4/4 <---standard (pretty much)
5/4 <---satch uses this a bit
6/4 <---fkn wierd... but it exists.
most composers start switching to these, after they hit the 5/8 mark.
5/8
6/8
7/8
8/8
9/8.
the basic theory behind it, is that you can only work a bar in a time signature that keeps to the value of a single beat, where as to have a bar work in a x/6 tempo, would require it to work in multiple beats, working in x/6 would be written on a sheet, like:l=4/4=l=2/4=l=4/4=l=2/4=l.
thereby having 6 beats played over 2 bars, but each bar keeping to the single beat (since the value 4 is one quarter of one beat).