Only one thing. A dotted half-note. The dot extends the length of a note by one-half. There is nothing in notation that stands for a three/quarter note.
A whole note.
It equals a whole note.
One half note
65
Actually its a Half rest not Half note
half note
5
2
Half note
1 (rest) 3 (rest), I belive.
There are two 8th notes in a quarter note. There are two quarter notes in a half note and two half notes in a whole note.
It gets half of a beat. Two eighth notes equal one quarter note.
The amount of beats per note really depends on the key, but in a typical 4-4 here would be the counts: Whole note - 4 beats Half note - 2 beats Quarter note - 1 beat Eighth not - 1/2 beat
it has the same value as a quarter note.
Two
1 (rest) 3 (rest), I belive.
There are two 8th notes in a quarter note. There are two quarter notes in a half note and two half notes in a whole note.
A note or rest that is followed by a dot (or period) will have it's duration increased by 1/2 of the note's (or rest's) original value.For example: a dotted quarter note will have a value of one-quarter plus one-eighth of a beat.
Tagalog Ng sixteen rest at quarter note
It gets half of a beat. Two eighth notes equal one quarter note.
The amount of beats per note really depends on the key, but in a typical 4-4 here would be the counts: Whole note - 4 beats Half note - 2 beats Quarter note - 1 beat Eighth not - 1/2 beat
it has the same value as a quarter note.
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.
it has the same value as a quarter note.
Whole/Dotted whole note/rest, Half/Dotted Half note/rest, Quarter/Dotted Quarter note/rest, Eighth/Dotted Eighth note/rest, Sixteenth/Dotted Sixteenth note/rest. These are the most common note values. They do go on though. All you have to do is multiply each number by two. For example: the next note/rest value after sixteenth is Thirty-second/Dotted Thirty-second. Then sixty-fourth; and so on.
How long the track lasts for. ------------------------------ In music theory, duration refers to the length of time that a note or rest lasts. A whole note or whole rest has twice the duration of a half note or half rest, a half note or half rest has twice the duration of a quarter note or quarter rest, and so on. The actual time involved is determined by the tempo, which ranges from largo (very slow) to presto (very fast). The lower of the numbers in the key signature determines which note has one beat (for example, a 4 indicates that the quarter note or quarter rest has one beat), and the upper number is the number of beats per measure.