Ti is the seventh note in a major scale (do re mi fa so la TI do). In the key of C, the Ti note would be B.
When you sing scales, you start on a note and if the key is major, you sing Do Re Mi Fa Sol La Ti Do. That's the first thing you learn. Then you switch to minor, and chromatic. It can get complicated. You should master singing major first.
In they key of C Major, sol would be the note G. Do (C) Re (D) Mi (E) Fa (F) Sol (G) La (A) Ti (B) Do (C).
When doing scales, the note between "so" and "ti" is "la." The full octave is do, re, mi, fa, so, la, ti, do. It was immortalized in song in "The Sound of Music."
when he was 16 :)
La is positioned between sol and ti on the solfege scale of music. La is no particular note itself, but rather is assigned to a different note depending the key of the music itself. Solfege is typically used in music to help learn the skill of sight-singing, in which each note is sung as a syllable. By memorizing the position and relative distance between solfege syllables, it is possible to become skilled in singing a piece of music with no assistance other than the sheet of music itself.
so la ti
ti
TI
To improve your piano playing technique using the do re mi fa so la ti do hands method, practice scales and exercises in each key using the corresponding hand positions for each note. This method helps develop muscle memory and finger strength, leading to better coordination and dexterity while playing the piano.
Ta is a quarter note ( basically a black line with a filled in black dot on the bottom) ti ti is an eighth note ( looks like two quarter notes connected at the top with a bridge, which is basically a line)
do,re,mi,fa,so,la,ti,do
In English, "te" is a Spanish word that translates to "you" in the informal singular form. It is commonly used as a direct or indirect object pronoun, as in "Te quiero" (I love you) or "Te veo" (I see you). Additionally, in solfège (a system for teaching pitch and sight-singing), "te" represents the lowered seventh scale degree (the note below "ti") in minor scales. Does that helps?