Music Theory Fundamentals Chapter 1-2
D. C.--da capo
go back to the beginning
eighth note
half as long in duration as quarter notes
middle C
appears on the first ledger line below the treble clef and on the first ledger line above the bass clef
keyboard plan (location of black and white keys)
parallels the system of notation
beat
the basic rhythmic pulse of music
bass clef
F clef. A symbol written on the staff to identify the second line from the top as F below middle C. Used primarily for the notation of pitches that lie below middle C.
treble clef
G clef. The symbol that indicates that the second line from the bottom of the staff is G above middle C. Used primarily to notate pitches that lie above middle C.
rhythm
the organization of music in time / action in time
tempo
the rate of speed of the basic pulse
note
the written symbol of a musical pitch
flag
a curved line drawn on the stem of the note to identify notes smaller than a quarter note
beam
a heavy horizontal line used to join together a group of notes smaller than the quarter note
fermata
a sign that indicates that the note is to be held or a longer duration than its normal value (add 1.5 value of note)
flat
a symbol that lowers the pitch of a note a half step
sharp
a symbol that raises the pitch of a note a half step
staff
a system of five lines on which notes are placed to indicate their pitch
stem
a vertical line drawn to the head of all notes smaller than the whole note
enharmonic spelling
characterizing pitches that sound the same but are notated differently
duration
how long a note lasts
top number in time signature
how many beats per measure
ledger lines
lines written above or below the staff to extend its range and to notate pitches that are too high or too low to be written on the staff
notation
one way to represent music on the page
register
specific areas of the entire range of pitches available to an instrument or voice
repeat sign
symbols used to indicate that the music between them should be played again
pitch
the highness or lowness of a musical sound depending on its rate of vibration
octave
the interval separating two pitches of the same name
notehead
the rounded part of the note written on a line or space to indicate pitch
grand staff (great staff/piano staff)
the staffs of the treble clef and the bass clef joined with a bracket or brace, used for notating music in all registers
quarter note
twice as long in duration as eighth notes
double bar
two vertical lines indicating the end of a section or piece
bottom number in time signature
what note gets the beat