|
|
How To Read Music
Here are the notes corresponding to the open strings of the violin:
The lines of the staff (from bottom to top) are E G B D F (Every Good
Boy Deserves Fudge). The spaces of the staff are F A C E (or face).
The above notes are whole notes. That means they last 4 beats
(count 1, 2, 3, 4). A half note lasts for 2 beats. A quarter
note lasts one beat. Don't be confused with the names and the number
of beats the note gets. It is a quarter of a whole note, not a quarter
of a beat.
A quarter note can be split into smaller counts:
To make many notes easy to read, they are linked together:
Rests have counts too. Rests are times when you don't play any
notes:
Adding a dot to a notes adds one-half to its original duration.
Remember a duration is how many beats the note is played.
Counting each beat can help you figure out when to play the notes written
on the music. Each beat is a number - beat 1, beat 2, beat 3, beat
4. When you tap your foot, each time your foot hits the floor is
a beat 1, 2, 3, 4.
Each time your foot is in the air, say "and". 1 and 2 and 3 and
4. Each "and" is a half beat.
But there's even more! In between the beat and the half beat,
there is a half of a half beat (or sixteenth note). Say "1 e and
a" then "2 e and a". See example below. The underlined words
are when you play the note.
One more thing. A sharp raises a note a half step. A flat
lowers a note a half step.
Back to eLessons
|
|