Yes. The note is the same whether the stem goes up or down.
Upside down notes do not change the music in any way, they are simply placed upside down so that the stem doesn't stick too far below/above the staff.
they need to because it tells you what to sing
Enharmonics is when you have two different note names but the pitch is the same
It is just about the presentation of the music (how it looks). If the stem of every note on the stave was the same, the stems would go too far up and if there's a stave above that one,stems would encroach on where extra 'leger lines' would be drawn and the music would look messy. By turning the stem 'upside-down', the stem drops down the stave instead, making the music look neater.It DOES NOT change the timing or pitch of any note.
Playing 3 different notes at the same time is a chord.
It depends on how many beats there are per measure.
musical notes and rests are the same as all instruments in the world.
They both read the same when rotated 180 degrees.
If you're upside down then 25-up
a palindrome
SWIMS
NOON
One of Jesus' disciples named Simon Peter was Crucified upside down. The reason he was upside down is that he did not count himself worthy to be crucified in the same way as Jesus.
MOW
NOON
SIS
There is more than just 1. C, D, O, S, and B are all curved letters that are the same upside down.
Peter was crucified upside down because he did not feel he was worthy of dying in the same manner as Our Lord.
Paul was not crucified upside down, he was beheaded. Peter was the apostle that was, as he said he did not deserve the same death as Jesus.