it depends on which rest note you're talking about. If it kind of looks like a fancy 7, that's an eighth rest, and counts for half a beat. If it looks like a weird squiggle thing, that's a quarter rest, and counts for one beat. If it looks like a little black rectangle sitting on top of the middle line, that's a half rest, and counts for 2 beats. If it looks like a black rectangle that sits under the middle line, that's a whole rest, and counts for 4 beats. There are other rests too, but those are the basics.
whole note two half notes four quarter notes eight single eight notes sixteenth notes whole rest half rest quarter rest and so on
rolling along doesn't have any whole notes EDCD EEE REST DDD REST EGG REST EDCD EEE REST DD EDC REST REST REST
There are two 8th notes in a quarter note. There are two quarter notes in a half note and two half notes in a whole note.
you give it to the woman that took notes to places
A A A (REST) A A A (REST) A B A G A A A (REST) then repeat
The notes to hot ai rand holey fingers are: GABAGAGAB GABAGBBAG GABAGAGAB GABAGBBAG GG Rest GG Rest GG Rest GG Rest GABAGAGAB GG Rest GG Rest GG Rest GG Rest GABAGBBAG REPEAT X2
The time values of notes and notes and corresponding rests are the same. Both the quarter note and the quarter rest worth one beat each. Two quarter rests (as well as two quarter notes) are equivalent to a half rest (half note) in duration.
a note u play, a rest u dont
i am not so sure!! hjjukil p
It gets half of a beat. Two eighth notes equal one quarter note.
C C Eb C Bb C rest rest rest C C Eb C Bb C rest rest rest F F Eb C Eb F rest rest rest C Eb C Bb C rest rest Eb F G G G rest F F F rest C C Eb C Bb C rest rest rest Note=the Eb(flat) and the C after are eigth notes so is the Eb than the F are eigth notes
A 'rest'.