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Published byNelson Hunter Modified over 8 years ago
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By the end of the lesson… I will have found out what dots mean for rhythmic note values I will be able to identify and use anacrusis I will be able to identify metronome markings and know what they mean
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Subdivisions This is the table that we used last lesson What if wanted a different subdivision? What if we wanted a note that was 3 beats long?
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Dots When we add a dot to a note, it immediately increases the value of the note by 50% (ie half as much again). The dot always goes to the right of the note.
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Different dotted notes How many beats do these notes last for? 3 beats 1 ½ beats ¾ of a beat
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Dotted Rhythm This rhythm is used often in music, as it adds up to one whole beat. It is called a dotted rhythm, and has a skipping quality. Can you clap this rhythm?
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Worksheet Exercise 1, page 21 Mark together
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Tied notes Ties are curved lines that join two or more notes of the same pitch together into one note of longer length.
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When to use tied notes? The note value created does not exist You cannot fit the note into the rest of the bar, so the two notes are tied across a barline Where the note does not cross a barline, and the note value does exist, but to make it would confuse the grouping of the notes in that bar. Look at Page 22 for an example
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Worksheet Exercise 2, Page 22
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Anacrusis An upbeat. An unaccented note or group of notes that come before the first strong beat of a phrase. At the start of a piece an anacrusis forms an incomplete bar.
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Londonderry Air
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Massachusets
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