Or, let’s see. Let o = half note and . = quarter note /= rest, in 4/4 time:
o o …o … /.o!
[those both look weird. I don’t know why. I know exactly what I mean.]
Anyway, I first heard it in the mid-50s, honked by guys in refurbished jalopies who honked it at the house on the corner, where a popular girl lived. In southern California.
It really annoyed my mother.
It probably has a name, other than the one I’ve given it. It ought to have a name. “Shave and a haircut” has a name.
I’m not sure I understand what you mean, but looking at that pattern it looks like a football thing sounded at matches on this side of the pond. No idea of its origin, or if it’s a different thing elsewhere.
I think the underlying idea of the OP is that some tunes are so distinctive by their beat pattern or syncopation alone, that they are recognizable even when played with just one note. “Shave and a Haircut Six Bit” is certainly an example.
Another one: Jingle Bells. When I was in college, and computer terminals were Teletypes, we did this. A Teletype of those days more-or-less emulated a typrwriter, complete with a bell that went “ding” when you typed close to the right margin – but output from the computer (or from a remote TTY) could also ring the bell.
So we programmed them to play Jingle Bells on the one-note bell. It was quite recognizable.
It’s very common in the UK in relation to soccer games. It’s played on air horns, car horns or clapping, both in the stadium and outside. Here’s an example of it being clapped in a stadium. I don’t know what it’s called or where it originated though.
See posts #4 and #6. It’s called “Let’s Go,” and it’s first known appearance was in 1961 in a demo recording by Duncan, Valentino, and Rich. It later became a hit for The Routers in 1962.
Okay! Thanks for all the answers. I’m extrapolating, here, that this was a clapping/cheerleading pattern that made its way through southern California* in the late '50s and was incorporated into a song, making it even more popular.
Naturally I didn’t hear any “let’s go” vocalizations after the honking at Judy’s house.
*Yeah, it could have started somewhere else, but lots of things started in California.
I know–or at least, I think–I’ve heard it in a couple of songs other than the ones mentioned here. But I sure can’t come up with their names.