Introduction:
Some people think trying to read music is hard and difficult. The following set of pages will try to introduce the most important topics in reading music in a very easy to understand way. Don't expect to fly through all the lessons and understand. As with anything new, it'll appear complicated and complex but as you look at the examples and read the explanations it will make sense. With that said, lets go on and introduce the first lesson.
Some people think trying to read music is hard and difficult. The following set of pages will try to introduce the most important topics in reading music in a very easy to understand way. Don't expect to fly through all the lessons and understand. As with anything new, it'll appear complicated and complex but as you look at the examples and read the explanations it will make sense. With that said, lets go on and introduce the first lesson.
Clefs:
Treble Clef | |
Bass Clef |
You might wonder why there are 2 different clefs. The reason is that most instruments using the bass clef usually have a lower pitch (sound) and regulary play low notes. If they were to use the treble clef the notes would appear so far below the staff (a Staff consists of 5 lines that musical notes are written on) it would be hard to read.
The treble clef:
The bass clef:
Time Signatures:
This means there is 4 quarter notes per measure. How is this so?
Looking at 4/4, you saw the 4 on top. You already knew that meant there were 4 somethings per measure. Then looking at the bottom number probably confused you. The bottom number can be 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, etc. Look at this chart.
Bottom Number | Value |
1 | Whole note |
2 | Half note |
4 | Quarter note |
8 | Eighth note |
16 | Sixteenth note |
For example:
3/4 is 3 quarter notes per measure. 5/2 is 5 half notes per measure. 6/8 is 6 eighth notes per measure.
There are also 2 other common things you might see where the time signature should be.
3/4 is 3 quarter notes per measure. 5/2 is 5 half notes per measure. 6/8 is 6 eighth notes per measure.
There are also 2 other common things you might see where the time signature should be.
Common Time Same as 4/4 time | |
Cut Time Same as 4/4 but everything is cut in half. Example: a half note = 1 quarter note, a whole note = 1 half note. |
Types of Notes:
1 of the most important parts of music is learning the types and values of notes. Here you will gain some understanding of how the notes look and sound. All of the music samples are recorded at the same speed and are just 1 measure.
The whole note:
- Looks like: an egg on its side, either with a line through it or not. The half note:
- Looks like: the same as a whole not but with a vertical line attached to it.
- Looks like: the same as a half note except the circle is filled in.
- Looks like: the same as quarter notes but with a curly off the line. They can also be put in groups of 4, 3, or 2.
- Looks like: the same as an eighth note but has double curlies. Can also be grouped in 4, 3 or 2 but are joined by a double line
- For each type of note you learned beforehand there is a corresponding rest.
- The whole rest:
- Looks like: a dark rectangle attached to a bar line, facing downwards. (1 shown)
- Looks like: a dark rectangle attached to a bar line, facing upwards. (2 shown)
- Looks like: a squiggly line. (4 shown)
- Looks like: a slanted line with a dot. (8 shown)
- Looks like: a slanted line with a double dot. (16 shown)
Basic Counting:
- First let us present you with this.
- 1 whole note = 2 half notes = 4 quarter notes = 8 eighth notes = 16 sixteenth notes. Keep that in mind while looking at these examples.
- First off, looking at the time signature you know that there are 4 quarter notes per measure. In the first measure the whole note gets all the beats (1, 2, 3 and 4) because 1 whole note = 4 quarter notes, and there are a total of 4 quarter notes per measure. In the second example, each half note gets 2 beats because 2 quarter notes = 1 half note. In the third example, each quarter note gets its own beat because there are 4 quarter notes per measure (time sig).
- The half note get the first 2 beats, and each quarter its own beat. This makes sense because the 4/4 time signature means there is 4 quarter notes per measure. 2 quarter notes + 1 half note (which is really 2 quarters) = 4 quarter notes, the total number of quarter notes for that measure (time sig).
- In this example there is something new. The + sign. It just means "and". If you said 1 + 2 + ... out loud it would sound like this.
- 1 and 2 and 3 and 4 and
Basic Counting, Part 2:
- Let's introduce a mixed example.
- The quarter note is obviously beat 1 because from the time sig you know there are 4 quarter notes per measure. You also already know one half note = 2 quarter notes therefore the half note must be beats 2 and 3. Finally, you know that two eighth notes = 1 quarter note so they must be the "4 +".
- Here every note in the measure is subdivided into 8th notes thus making it a lot more "fluid" to count. Its pretty easy to understand too... one quarter note is two 8th notes, so it gets "1 +". The half note is really four eighth notes so it get "2 + 3 +". And the each 8th note get a half so one is "4" and the other is the "and" of 4.
- Basically counting 16th notes is similiar to 8th notes except that you need to add more things to count with. I was taught using "e" and "a", but feel free to use what you want. Each part, the "1", "e", "+", "a" are all 1/4 of 1 quarter note. Together they add up to 1 beat according to the time sig. (4 sixteenths = 1 quarter)
- Here you are.. the top of the note hill. Just look at these and the counting section is over! Remember.. from this time sig you are counting the 8th notes. Remember you are counting half notes, and therefore you have to subdivide the eighth notes and quarter notes accordingly.
Other symbols
- This page contains some of the symbols you might come across while reading music.
Play the note 1/2 step up (Sharp) | |
Play the note 1/2 step down (Flat) | |
Play the note normally; pay no attention to the key signature | |
The above 3 symbols can also appear at the beginning of each line of music affecting the whole line. Also, if they are included in an individual measure, they override each other and carry through ties or slurs. | |
Compressed Rests. The number on top specifies how many measures of rest. | |
Fermata. Hold the note until cut off. | |
Repeat. Play through normally until 2nd symbol, then go back to 1st symbol and play again, this time ignoring 2nd symbol. | |
Begin and End. Marks the beginning and ending of a piece. | |
Tie. Make each note flow into the next. (Do not break them up) |
Shaping and Volume of Music
- For music to have some real feeling and expression it must be shaped.
Volume of notes | |
f | Loud |
ff | Loud Loud |
fff | As loud as possible |
p | Quiet |
mp | Medium Quiet |
mf | Medium Loud |
pp | Quiet Quiet |
cresc | Louder |
Stuff that affects notes | |
sfz | Hit note then back way off and build back up |
tr | Trill |
vibrato | Add waves to sound |
legato | Smooth |
Stuff that affects the speed of note | |
poco. | Gradually |
accel. | Faster |
rit. | Slower |
dim. | Diminish |
soli | Shared solo in section |
solo | 1 person solo (wow) |
Thats all...........
Hope this Blog helped you in getting the basics about reading the music notes.......
Will be back with another interesting post...
Kish...
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