2008年1月22日星期二

Lesson 6: 音符時值...續集 (Note duration, cont'd)

Having just the whole note, half note, quarter note, eighth note, etc. are not sufficient for expressing more complicated rhythm in most classical or contemporary music. E.g. how do you write 3 beats? There must be a way in music to do that. In fact, there is more than a way!

Dotted Notes
When you add a dot to a note, you add half of its value to the note. E.g. a quarter note is normally 1 beat, so a dotted quarter note would last 1.5 beats. Similarly, a half note is typically 2 beats, adding a dot to it (dotted half note) would make it 2 + 2/2 = 3 beats!

Tie
A tie can occur between two or more notes to add all their values together. E.g. when a quarter note is tied to a half note, then the result would be 2 + 1 = 3 beats. When a quarter note is tied to a sixteenth note, the result would be 1.25 beats. The tie is also used when a note is being stretched across measures.

There are also times in music when nothing is to be played. These periods of silence need to be properly notated as well, thus the need for another class of symbols: rests (休止符).
Just like the notes shown in Lesson 5, there are whole rest, half rest, quarter rest, etc... the duration of which corresponds to their respective notes.


Whole rest



Half rest



Quarter rest



Eighth rest



Sixteenth rest


Rests are also similar to notes in the way that both rests and notes can be dotted. E.g. a dotted quarter rest stands for a rest of 1.5 beats. However, ties cannot be used on rests.


Questions for this lesson:

  1. Do you know how to write all the notes/rests presented in this lesson?
  2. Can you name all the different notes/rests at sight?
  3. Can you calculate the total duration of a string of notes/rests?

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