On sheet music, when you have a note that has 2 dots to the right of the note, te length of the note is lengethened. The first dot means that you half the amount of the regular note, and make it a tie with the original note. So, for instance, a dotted quarter note would be Quarter + Eigth.
Now, the second dot means you make a tie with the dotted note, by halfing the dot amount. So, in example, A double-dotted quarter note would be Quarter + Eigth + Sixteenth.
Mostmusical compositions have 2 dots, at the most, but more have been known to occur. So, with the first dot, you half the value of the original note and tie it along, and with each extra dot, you half the dot that precedes it, and tie it along with the original note and dot(s) that have already been tied.
There is no record of octitonic voice. An octatonic scale is any eight-note musical scale.
Probably not. It is not the way any piano note would be designated.
There is no musical note that is the sound of a flushing toilet. It's only a sound effect, it doesn't have any tone to it.
There is no note 'p' on the recorder, or on any musical instrument.
A "rest". The duration of the rest can be: * a whole note * a half note * a quarter note * an eighth note * a sixteenth note And in any time signature variation.
Yes. Any sound can be a musical note
There is no record of octitonic voice. An octatonic scale is any eight-note musical scale.
There is no record of octitonic voice. An octatonic scale is any eight-note musical scale.
Probably not. It is not the way any piano note would be designated.
The term, "root" in Musical terms means the note that the rest of a chord is based around. For example, a C major chord which consists of the notes C, E and G would have a root note of C as it the note that allows the rest of a chord to follow. It is always the first note of any chord.
There is no musical note that is the sound of a flushing toilet. It's only a sound effect, it doesn't have any tone to it.
There is no note 'p' on the recorder, or on any musical instrument.
Octave
A "rest". The duration of the rest can be: * a whole note * a half note * a quarter note * an eighth note * a sixteenth note And in any time signature variation.
Every music note has its own duration--time value. When the staff is designated with a clef, any note drawn on the staff has a pitch.
Yes. The note is the same whether the stem goes up or down.
Depending on which scale you are playing, it can be any note. If you are talking about solfegge syllables, the third syllable is "mi". If you are playing a C Major scale, the third note, mi, would be the note E.