music notes

music notes

Biyernes, Hulyo 22, 2011

Guitar notes

--Notes on the first string

E on the First String

E is the pitch of the open first string. A string is open when no notes are fretted on that string. This E is found on the fourth space on the treble clef staff:
E on the first string in notation

F on the First String

F is on the first fret of the first string. It should be played with the first finger.
F on the high E string
Fretting F
F is found on the fifth line of the staff in treble clef:
F on the high E string in notation

G on the First String

G appears on the third fret of the first string and should be played with the third finger.
G on the first string
Fretting G
This note appears on the space above the staff.




G on the first string in notation

--Notes on the second string

B on the Second String

B is the pitch of the open second string. The note is found on the third line of the treble clef staff:
B on the B string in notation

C on the Second String

C is on the first fret of the second string. Play this note with the first finger.
C on the second string
Fretting C
C is on the third space of the staff:
C on the B string in notation

D on the Second String

D is found on the third fret of the second string:
D on the second string
Fretting D
D is on the fourth line of the staff:
D on the B string in notation

--Notes on the third string

G on the Third String

G is the pitch of the open third string. Because of this, the third string is also known as the G string. G is on the second line of the treble clef staff:
G on the third string in notation

A on the Third String

A is on the second fret of the G string. Play this note with the second finger.
A on the third string
Fretting A
A is found on the second space of the staff:
A on the third string in notation

--Notes on the fourth sting

D on the Fourth String

The pitch of the open fourth string is D. This note is found on the first space below the treble clef staff:
 on the fourth string in notation

E on the Fourth String

E is on the second fret of the fourth string. Play D with the second finger.
E on the fourth string
Fretting E
E is on the first line of the staff:
E on the fourth string in notation

F on the Fourth String

F is on the third fret of the fourth string. Play this note with the third finger.
F on the fourth string
Fretting F
F is found on the first space of the staff:
F on the fourth string in notation

--Notes on the fifth string

A on the Fifth String

A is the pitch of the open fifth string. It is found on the second ledger line below the staff:
A on the fifth string in notation

B on the Fifth String

B is on the second fret of the fifth string. Play B with the second finger.
B on the fifth string
Fretting B
B is found on the space below the first ledger line below the staff:
B on the fifth string in notation

C on the Fifth String

C is on the third fret of the fifth string. Play this note with the third finger:
C on the fifth string
Fretting C
C is on the first ledger line below the treble clef staff:
C on the fifth string in notation

--Notes on the sixth string

E on the Sixth String

E is the pitch of the open sixth string. This note is found on the space below the third ledger line:
E on the sixth string in notation

F on the Sixth String

F is on the first fret of the sixth string. Play F with the first finger.
F on the 6th string
Fretting F
F is on the third ledger line below the treble clef staff:
E on the sixth string in notation

G on the Sixth String

G is found on the third fret of the sixth string. Play this note with the third finger.
G on the 6th string
Fretting G
G is on the space below the second ledger line below the staff:
E on the sixth string in notation

notes

A time signature tells you how the music is to be counted. the time signature is written at the beginning of the staff after the clef and key signature.
The top number of the time signature tells you how many beats to count.
The bottom number tells you what kind of note to count. That is whether to count the beats as quarter notes, eighth notes, or sixteenth notes.

notes indicates the length (number of counts) of musical sound.

Whole note illustration Whole notes last four beats.
Half note illustration Half notes last two beats.
Quarter note music illustration Quarter notes last one beat.

Any note shorter than a quarter note has one or more "hooks" to indicate its length. Each hook cuts the note's length in half.
 
Eighth notes (one hook) last one-half beat.
Sixteenth notes (two hooks) last one-quarter beat.

These proceed on to thirty-second and sixty-fourth notes (with three and four hooks, respectively). If two or more notes requiring hooks appear in a row, they're often connected with "beams." The number of horizontal lines in a beam gives note length.
 
Two eighth notes connected by a beam

Music also has rests, which indicate silent beats. Music rests are counted in the same way as music notes, and correspond to the notes they represent.
Rest often requires that you stop the sound of your guitar strings. This process is called dampening the strings.
 
Whole note rest last four beats
Half note rest last two beats
Quarter note rest last one beat
Eighth note rest last one-half beat
Sixteenth note rest last one-quarter beat
Music is written in notes on a staff. The staff has five lines and four spaces between the lines. at the beginning of the staff is a clef sign. Guitar is written in the treble clef.


 Each line and space of the staff has a letter name. The lines are, (from bottom to top) E-G-B-D-F, which you can remember as Every Good Boys Does Fine. The spaces are, (from bottom to top) F-A-C-E, which spells "FACE."



If we need more notes above or below the staff we add Ledger Lines, which extend the range of the staff. (Middle C is the first ledger line below the staff in Treble Clef.)

Music-GClef.svg G clef (Treble Clef)
The centre of the spiral defines the line or space upon which it rests as the pitch G above middle C. Positioned here, it assigns G above middle C to the second line from the bottom of the staff, and is referred to as the "treble clef." This is the most commonly encountered clef in modern notation, and is used for most modern vocal music. Middle-C is the 1st ledger line below the stave here. The shape of the clef comes from a stylised upper-case-G.


Music-Fclef.svg F clef (Bass Clef)
The line or space between the dots in this clef denotes F below middle C. Positioned here, it makes the second line from the top of the staff F below middle C, and is called a "bass clef." This clef appears nearly as often as the treble clef, especially in choral music, where it represents the bass and baritone voices. Middle C is the 1st ledger line above the stave here. The shape of the clef comes from a stylised upper-case-F (which used to be written the reverse of the modern F)

The Notes of The Guitar


Notes on the Guitar

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