In your terminology it would be a "line note". The " line note" that comes directly before or after the "space note" is said to be a "step" away from the "space note".
Line notes or notes that you see on the staff lines where the line goes right through the note. Any other note can precede or follow a line note, for instance a quarter or half note.
Normally, nothing... or (I guess) the note that came before that one. You write the accidental first and then the note, so nothing concerned with a note comes before its' accidental.
The note that comes after La is Te.
A dot to the right of any note, increases the time of the note by half. So a dot to the right of a half note, makes the note a three quarter note.
That is where you are supposed to take a quick breathe.
Line notes or notes that you see on the staff lines where the line goes right through the note. Any other note can precede or follow a line note, for instance a quarter or half note.
Normally, nothing... or (I guess) the note that came before that one. You write the accidental first and then the note, so nothing concerned with a note comes before its' accidental.
Before plucking there should be no sound (no note); right after plucking it, there is.
Before plucking there should be no sound (no note); right after plucking it, there is.
It is called the Death Note. Or rather, the Sixty-Fourth Note. Or, perhaps you mean the Foot Note?
Write a note (half note, quarter note or a whole note, it doesn't matter which) on any line or space where the "F" note in situated, then put a flat symbol in front of any note which sits on an "F line" or "F space". Just above the first line on the treble clef is where "Middle F" is located, so you'd just write a music note on that space and put the flat sign directly before it. Hope that helps.
No, it is usually right after the bar line. The note right after the bar line is the first note of the measure, which usually receives the most emphasis.
The note that comes after La is Te.
why is note and point important to gap
If you are in treble clef, then it is on the bottom line of the staff or the space right below the top line. If you are in bass clef, the note may be the second space from the top, as it is the only E on the staff. If you are in alto clef, it is either on the second line from the top or the space right below the last line. If you are in tenor clef, it is either on the top line or the last space, right above the last line. I hope this covers all of it.
Write the sharp or flat symbol to the left of the note which needs to be sharped or flatted. Accidentals written before a note are never placed to the right of the note which needs to be raised or lowered.
a delivety note is a note that comes with a delivery.