Hit your fingernail on a hard ,possibly ,wood surface mabey your computer desk... that's about it:)
Sixteenth note stems facing upwards should be positioned on the right side of the note head.
A sixteenth note with the stem pointing downwards is notated by placing the note head on the third line of the staff with the stem extending downwards.
The main music note symbols used in musical notation are the whole note, half note, quarter note, eighth note, sixteenth note, and thirty-second note. These symbols represent different durations of sound in music.
In music, there are different types of notes that represent different durations of sound. The main note types include whole notes, half notes, quarter notes, eighth notes, and sixteenth notes. Each note type has a specific length of time it is played for, with whole notes being the longest and sixteenth notes being the shortest.
To properly notate a dotted eighth note in 6/8 time signature, you would write it as a single eighth note followed by a dot. This means the note is held for three sixteenth note beats in total.
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.
1/4 beat
A whole note is worth 4 beats, a half note is worth 2 beats, a quarter note is worth 1 beat, an eighth note is worth 1/2 a beat, a sixteenth note is worth 1/4 of a beat, a dotted half note is worth 3 beats, and a dotted quarter note is worth 1 and a 1/2 beats.
A quaver with two tails is a musical note known as a "demisemiquaver" or "sixteenth note." It is worth one-sixteenth of a whole note in terms of duration. In terms of beats, it typically receives half a beat in common time (4/4).
2 sixteenth note
Sixteenth note
A sixteenth note gets half the value of an eight note. Ex. If an eighth note got one count, a sixteenth note would get one half count.
The sixteenth note of a breve is a quaver.
0.0625 note.
Sixteenth note
Well, honey, a half note is worth two beats, and a sixteenth note is worth a quarter of a beat, so you do the math - there are 8 sixteenth notes in a half note. But hey, who's counting? Oh right, we are.
If after means shorter length, then that would be a sixteenth note. Two sixteenth notes equal an eighth note.