octave
If you are playing a wind instrument, you don't tongue between the notes. If you are playing some sort of percussion instrument you lengthen the note.
8
A step is the distance between two notes. A half step is the shortest (tonal) distance between two notes (such as between B and C), and a whole step is therefore a distance of two half steps between two notes (such as between C and D, since C#/Db is between them).
notice how there are no black noted between e and f or between b and c, but all the other notes on a keyboard have a black note between them? The distance from E to F or from B to C is calles a semitone. Alle the other white notes have a black note between them and this distance is called a tone! glad i could help
A. whole note
If you are playing a wind instrument, you don't tongue between the notes. If you are playing some sort of percussion instrument you lengthen the note.
5th
8
A step is the distance between two notes. A half step is the shortest (tonal) distance between two notes (such as between B and C), and a whole step is therefore a distance of two half steps between two notes (such as between C and D, since C#/Db is between them).
the distance between two keys next to each other is called a half-step. The distance between any two notes is called an intravel. Each intravel has its own name, second, flattened third, natural third, fourth, etc....
notice how there are no black noted between e and f or between b and c, but all the other notes on a keyboard have a black note between them? The distance from E to F or from B to C is calles a semitone. Alle the other white notes have a black note between them and this distance is called a tone! glad i could help
Notes that have different names but sound the same are called enharmonic equivalents. An example of this is the notes F# and Gb, which are played at the same pitch on an instrument but have different names.
On piano and other keyed instruments, this is called a glissando.
I am in band so I know that a slide between two notes is called a tie when they are the same note and a slur if it is two different notes.
A half step.
A. whole note
A. Half Step.