The sharp symbol (#)
1/2= quaver, 1/4= semi quaver 1/8= demi semi quaver hope that helps :)
The symbol to lower a note a half step is called a flat.
Just the opposite, actually. A sharp RAISES a note by one half-step.
if you are playing a brass instrument you tighten or loosen your ambocure (lips) to come out with a higher or lower note a sharp
The sharp symbol (#)
1/2= quaver, 1/4= semi quaver 1/8= demi semi quaver hope that helps :)
The symbol to lower a note a half step is called a flat.
Just the opposite, actually. A sharp RAISES a note by one half-step.
A flat (♭) lowers the pitch of a note by a semitone (half-step). A sharp (#) raises the pitch of a note by a semitone. Naturals cancel out sharps or flats that apply to notes and make them their usual pitch (♮).
A flat (♭) lowers the pitch of a note by a semitone (half-step). A sharp (#) raises the pitch of a note by a semitone. Naturals cancel out sharps or flats that apply to notes and make them their usual pitch (♮).
Musical note
if you are playing a brass instrument you tighten or loosen your ambocure (lips) to come out with a higher or lower note a sharp
That could be a flat if the note was previously natural, or a natural if the note was sharp.
For half step sharps, the most commonly used and the one you are probably referring to that raises a pitch a half tone up, you use a # symbol. If you are writing on manuscript (staff paper), you write the # symbol before the note. If you are writing it on regular notebook paper, you write it after the note name, i.e. C#. For whole step sharps, which raises a pitch a whole tone up, you use a x symbol. The position of the symbol is the same as half step sharps. For quarter step sharps, which are unconventional in western music but used in oriental music, look it up on wikipedia. The position of the symbol is the same as half step sharps also.
it makes the note a half step higher
symbol, indication, sign, token, representation, mark, pitch, key, figure, character