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This key signature â A major or F# minor â consists of three sharps placed after the clef In musical notation, a key signature is a series of sharp symbols or flat symbols placed on the staff, designating notes that are to be consistently played one semitone higher or lower than the...
This article or section does not adequately cite its references or sources. ...
In music, syncopation is when a stressing of a normally unstressed beat in a bar or failure to sound a tone on an accented beat occurs. ...
The time signature (also known as meter signature) is a notational convention used in Western musical notation to specify how many beats are in each bar and what note value constitutes one beat. ...
For other uses, see Tempo (disambiguation). ...
In musical notation, the Italian word staccato (literally detached, plural staccatos or staccati) indicates that notes are sounded in a detached and distinctly separate manner, with silence making up the latter part of the time allocated to each note. ...
For other uses, see Octave (disambiguation). ...
An accidental is a musical notation symbol used to raise or lower the pitch of a note from that indicated by the key signature. ...
For other senses of this word, see clef (disambiguation). ...
In musical notation, the staff or stave is a set of five horizontal lines on which note symbols are placed to indicate pitch and rhythm. ...
In music, ornaments are musical flourishes that are not necessary to the overall melodic (or harmonic) line, but serve to decorate or ornament that line. ...
Particularly, this article is not about Hymn meters, as often found on hymn tunes Meter (UK spelling: metre) is the measurement of a musical line into measures of stressed and unstressed beats, indicated in Western music notation by a symbol called a time signature. ...
In music, a quarter note (American) or crotchet (Commonwealth) is played for one quarter of the duration of a whole note. ...
In music, a half note (American) or minim is a note played for one half the duration of a whole note, hence the name. ...
Figure 1. ...
Figure 1. ...
Figure 1. ...
Ledger lines above the staff, using eighth notes. ...
Figure 1. ...
Figure 1. ...
A grace note is a kind of music notation used to denote several kinds of musical ornaments. ...
âFortissimoâ redirects here. ...
Various breve notations A double whole note or breve is a note in music, lasting twice as long as a whole note (or semibreve). ...
In musical notation, a bar or measure is a segment of time defined as a given number of beats of a given duration. ...
Image File history File links An example of syncopation. ...
Music notation is a system of writing for music. ...
In music, a tie is when multiple notes of the same pitch are to be played as one note with a duration equal to the sum of the individual notes durations. ...
A slur is a symbol in Western musical notation indicating that the notes it embraces are to be played without separation. ...
The Grand Staff using both bass clef on the bottom and treble clef on top allows for four octaves of notation, counting the two high ledger lines for Soprano C and two ledger lines below bass clef for Deep C. It is known as the grand staff because the two...
In music, a thirty-second note (American or German terminology) or demisemiquaver (British or classical terminology) is a note played for 1/32 of the duration of a whole note (or semibreve). ...
In music notation, a sixty-fourth note (American) or a hemidemisemiquaver (British/Canadian) is a note played for 1/64 of the duration of a whole note. ...
Example 1. ...
In music, a 128th note in American English, or a semihemidemisemiquaver or quasihemidemisemiquaver in British English, is a note that is half as long as a sixty-fourth note. ...
A rest is an interval of silence in a piece of music, marked by a sign indicating the length of the pause. ...
A fermata (or hold or pause) is an element of musical notation indicating that the note should be sustained for longer than its note value would indicate. ...
A Mordent is an elongated bar above a letter, used e. ...
Parts of a note In music notation, a note value indicates the relative duration of a note, using the color or shape of the note head, the presence or absence of a stem, and the presence or absence of flags. ...
This list of musical compositions or pieces in Western music that have unusual time signatures is necessarily incomplete, and often subject to disagreement concerning the nature of time signatures. ...
A rehearsal letter is a boldface letter of the alphabet in an orchestral score, and its corresponding parts, that provides a convenient spot from which to resume rehearsal after a break. ...
A beam in musical notation is constructed as one or more lines used to connect multiple consecutive eighth notes (quavers), sixteenth notes (semiquavers), or smaller note values. ...
In music an articulation is a sign, direction, or performance technique which indicates or affects the transition or continuity between notes or sounds. ...
In musical notation, staccatissimo (plural: staccatissimos or staccatissimi) indicates that the notes are to be played extremely separated and distinct, a superlative staccato. ...
In music, an fifteenth (sometimes abbreviated 15ma) is the interval between one musical note and another with one-quarter or quadruple the frequency. ...
In musical notation, a natural sign is a sign used to cancel a flat or sharp from either a preceding note or the key signature. ...
Ossia is a musical term for an alternate passage which may be played instead of the original passage. ...