That is a triplet.
Playing a set of 3 notes during the same amount of time that a set of 2 notes would usually be played.
2 apparently according the question I just got asked on 'Are you smarter than a 5th Grader' on Facebook ;]
A scale.
The melody is the tune that is carried throughout the song that is most remembered. It's a combination of notes that are set against a musical rhythm and background. The line of notes vary from one end of the scale to the other and have a logical order to form a tune.
THE ANSER IS 8 NOTES IN A LINE YOU MUMPET
fege is used with the key signatures. For instance, if you're in G major, do=G, re=A, mi= B, fa=C, sol=D, la=E, ti=F#, do=G. So, there's never a set, set of notes for the syllables, because the notes are always different in different keys.
It could mean the set of all real numbers excluding 0. For example, a set over which division is defined.
Do you mean diary - a set of notes of your daily happenings.
I assume "pol-rhythm" was a typo of "poly-rhythm". A poly-rhythm is a set of two rhythms that do not match up evenly, such as a triplet played over two eighth notes, or a triplet played over four sixteenth notes, or even something as obnoxious as a quintuplet played over a septuplet.
2 apparently according the question I just got asked on 'Are you smarter than a 5th Grader' on Facebook ;]
the notes are eaasy
The word set means to make a computer start over again.
An angle bracket is either of a set of brackets, ? and ?, used to enclose text, or one of the inequality signs, < or >, when used as brackets, such as in HTML.
triad
no
You can attach a cowbell to a drum set by using a clamp or mounting bracket designed for percussion instruments. Simply secure the cowbell to the drum set using the clamp or bracket, making sure it is positioned securely and within easy reach for playing.
The symbol "X" with a line over it is often used in mathematics to represent the average or arithmetic mean of a set of values. It is calculated by adding up all the values and dividing by the number of values in the set.
To adjust the octave higher in MuseScore when selecting a set of notes, you can use the "Ctrl" key on your keyboard along with the up arrow key to move the selected notes up by an octave.