its worth 2 beats
a whole note equals 4 beats and takes up an entire measure in a 4/4 time signature
A whole note in 4/4 time.
Strangely enough, an eighth note is one eighth of a whole note.
A whole note if we're talking 4/4 time signature
It depends on the time signature. But I will assume you mean this: In 4/4 time, a whole note gets four beats, therefore a quarter of that is one beat., which is a quarter note.
a whole note equals 4 beats and takes up an entire measure in a 4/4 time signature
well it is kind of complicated but it is called a sixteenth note
A whole note in 4/4 time.
That would depend on the time signature of the piece. For example, if the piece is written in 4/4 time, a sixteenth note is a quarter beat. If the piece is written in 2/2 time, the sixteenth note is worth an eighth of a beat.
Strangely enough, an eighth note is one eighth of a whole note.
Most of the time it has four, but technically the whole note is as long as the entire (whole) measure. Since 4/4 is the most common time signature the whole note usually equals 4 beats but in say, 6/4, the whole note equals 6 beats.
A whole note if we're talking 4/4 time signature
It depends on the time signature. But I will assume you mean this: In 4/4 time, a whole note gets four beats, therefore a quarter of that is one beat., which is a quarter note.
That depends: a quarter note receives 1 beat in 4/4 time but a 1/2 of a beat in 2/4 time. it depends on what time signature the music has. in 4/4 time though: quarter note: one beat half note: 2 beats eighth note: 1/2 a beat whole note: 4 beats
It depends on the time signature. If the time signature is x/4, the the whole note gets 4 beats. It also depends on where the dot is. If the dot is above the whole note, it gets two beats; if it is to the right of the whole note it gets six beats.
In 3/2, a whole note gets two beats.
The number of counts in a whole note is dependent on the time signature. If the bottom number is 4 (quarter) then the whole note gets 4 counts; if the bottom number is 2 (half) then the whole note get 2 counts; etc.