yes. any instrument can.
. One beat. [[... Not quite. That is only true if the time signature has a 4 in the lower half. This means the beat is a quarter note. If your signature is 7/8 (for example) this means that there are 7 beats per measure and the eighth note gets the beat. In a given time signature and tempo, it would take the same amount of time to play two eighth notes as it would to play one quarter note.]]
A half note is 2 beats. So you hold a note for 2 beats to play it on ANY INSTRUMENT
It means to play in eighth notes. For example, if you have a half note with one diagonal slash through the tail, play it as four eighth notes. Envision this by thinking that an eighth note has one line for its tail. If there are 2 slashed, you play sixteenth notes, for sixteenth notes have 2 lines for its tail etc.
A whole note last for four beats Half notes last for two Quarter notes last 1 beat Eighth notes are half a beat. The actual length of a note depends on the tempo of the song. You can play songs fast or slow with the same notes and still have the same song, just quicker.
1, the definition of any triplet is two notes of one kind in the space of two of the same kind of note, so three eighth notes in the space of two. Two eighth notes equal ond quarter, so 1 quarter note.
. One beat. [[... Not quite. That is only true if the time signature has a 4 in the lower half. This means the beat is a quarter note. If your signature is 7/8 (for example) this means that there are 7 beats per measure and the eighth note gets the beat. In a given time signature and tempo, it would take the same amount of time to play two eighth notes as it would to play one quarter note.]]
A half note is 2 beats. So you hold a note for 2 beats to play it on ANY INSTRUMENT
It means to play in eighth notes. For example, if you have a half note with one diagonal slash through the tail, play it as four eighth notes. Envision this by thinking that an eighth note has one line for its tail. If there are 2 slashed, you play sixteenth notes, for sixteenth notes have 2 lines for its tail etc.
A whole note last for four beats Half notes last for two Quarter notes last 1 beat Eighth notes are half a beat. The actual length of a note depends on the tempo of the song. You can play songs fast or slow with the same notes and still have the same song, just quicker.
1, the definition of any triplet is two notes of one kind in the space of two of the same kind of note, so three eighth notes in the space of two. Two eighth notes equal ond quarter, so 1 quarter note.
While you only play quarter notes for one beat, a quarter note is 1/4th of a full note, which is 4 beats.
Beats in music refer to the time scale of the piece. Such as 60s in a minute , 4 beats per bar (on average). To help musicians know when to play the note!
Tempo is the rate of speed of the musical piece or the timing of music. It's often indicated on written compositions by a descriptive or metronomic direction to the performer: Prestissimo: 200 - 208 beats per minute Presto: 168 - 200 beats per minute Allegro: 120 - 168 beats per minute Moderato: 108 - 120 beats per minute Andante: 76 - 108 beats per minute Adagio: 66 - 76 beats per minute Larghetto: 60 - 66 beats per minute Largo: the slowest tempo, 40 - 60 beats per minute Tempo is the fastest or the slowest you go if your performing play at a steady pace Otherwise if you Rush you will make mistakes then stop preforming because you get embarrassed
Sixteenth notes are a matter of rhythm. If you have a number four at the bottom of your time signature there are four sixteenths to each beat. If you have a six at the bottom of the time signature there are six to each dotted-quarter note beat or two to each eighth note beat, and so on and so on.
A musical note is a graphic representing a length of time. More specifically, it represents a subdivision of a "measure". For instance, if you are playing in 4/4 time (that's four beats in a measure, quarter note gets the best...so a measure consists of four quarter notes...) a quarter notes takes up one quarter of a measure, so there are four quarter notes in a measure. For another example, there would be eight eighth notes per measure. For a more advanced example, a quarter note, followed by two eighth notes, followed by two sixteenth notes, followed by three eighth notes will equal a measure. (1/4 + 2/8 + 2/16 + 3/8 = 1 measure). The definition of a note is often confused with musical "pitch" which delineates frequency by note name, i.e. A, B, D flat, G sharp, etc.
first you slur F and D ,c, B flat c, d, slur:F and D ,c B flat, slur:C and D but their in eighth notes ,then you slur f and d ,f, slur: g, d, g , slur: f and d,c,b flat for 3 beats
On my version, you rest for six measures. Then you play a high C. You play a B, a high C, a B, and a high C (you play the last four notes as sixteenth notes and you hold the last C.) Then you play a B, a high C, a B, and a high C in sixteenth notes, a B and a G as an eighth note, a B as a quarter note, and a G and an F as an eighth note. You rest for one beat and then you play a B, a high C, a B, and a high C again as a sixteenth note, an F as a quarter note, and a D as an eighth note. Then you play E flat, E, E natural, and E as a sixteenth note, two F's as quarter notes, an E flat, a low C, and an F that's a half note. Then you play an E flat, an E, an E natural, and an E as a sixteenth notes, and then you play an F as a quarter note. You rest for five measures and then you play a B , a high C, a B, and a high C as a sixteenth note. Then you repeat the last sixteenth note I just said.