3/4/time
samba music is written in 3/4 time signature
A symphony can be written in any time signature - or none at all if necessary.
The time signature is placed on the staff between the clef and the key signature.
Common time is usually written as a C at the beginning of the stave where the time signature would go and is the equivalent of writing 4,4.
Samba drums come from Brazil. Congas do not come from Brazil and are not samba drums. Samba drums include surdos, caixas, repiniques, chocalhos, ganzas, repiniques, agogos, pandeiros and cuicas. You can find out more about all of these by clicking on the related link below.
True samba is from Rio de Janeiro and some styles are samba enredo, pagode. People outside Brazil tend to call all Brazilian music samba though. Other styles that foreigners call samba include Maracatu, samba reggae, and samba funk.
Most samba music is written in 3/4 time.
3/4/time
Samba is played in 2/4 time.
Most samba music is written in 3/4 time.
Samba Shikitei has written: 'Ukiyo buro'
Madeleine Mbono Samba Azan has written: 'Martin Samba' -- subject(s): Biography, History, Revolutionaries, Soldiers
3/4 time
A symphony can be written in any time signature - or none at all if necessary.
Frances Angevine Gray has written: 'Fragile armor' 'Signature of time'
Yasuo Honda has written: 'Shikitei Samba no bungei'
'"March of the Pigs" has an unusual meter, alternating three bars of 7/8 time with one bar of 4/4 time (in effect, a 29/8 time signature).'
The time signature is the time and beat of the song, and the key signature is what major or minor it is in