1
one and a half.
It depends on which kind of rest it is. quarter rest: 1 beat half rest: 2 beats whole rest: 4 beats.
one
It gets half of a beat. Two eighth notes equal one quarter note.
Each note or rest determines the amount of beats in for a note or rest. The time signature of a song consists of two numbers, the top number represents how many beats in a measure, and the bottom number represents how many beats a whole note gets. In 4/4 timing (4/4 being the time signature) a whole note/rest gets four beats and a measure consists of four beats. Therefore: Half note/rest- Two Beats Quarter note/rest- One beat Eighth note/rest- Half of a beat Sixteenth note/rest- Quarter of a beat and so on to 32nd, 64th, etc. Another coming time signature includes 2/2 (cut time) where a whole note/rest gets two beats and there are two beats in a measure. Therefore: Half note/rest- One Beat Quarter note/rest- Half of a beat Eighth note/rest- Quarter of a beat Etc. Other common time signatures include 3/4 (three beats to a measure), 2/4, and 6/8. Follow the same process in deriving the number of beats in a note or rest.
it has the same value as a quarter note.
it has the same value as a quarter note.
There are two beats in a minim rest. A minim is a two beat note so a minim rest would be a two beat note where your not playing!Fizzysweete
a one beat rest is a crochet and looks like a side ways Z and a C attached to the bottom
The amount of beats per note really depends on the key, but in a typical 4-4 here would be the counts: Whole note - 4 beats Half note - 2 beats Quarter note - 1 beat Eighth not - 1/2 beat
The quarter rest has a duration of one quarter of a whole rest, usually one rest.
1
That depends on the time signature. In common time, or 4/4 time, which is the most common time signature, a sixteenth rest will last for one quarter of a beat.