Rests are silences in music. They have duration but no pitch.
Here is an example of a rest in some music:
See the page on the duration of notes and rests for different types of rests.
Showing posts with label rest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rest. Show all posts
Rests
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music,
music theory,
rest
Duration of Notes and Rests, Dotted Notes, Ties and Beamed Notes
Duration is how long a note or rest is to be played. Notes and rests have fractional durations.
A Half-note is half as long as a Whole-note, a Quarter-note is a quarter as long as a Whole-note and is also half as long as a Half-note, and so forth. Each duration will have its own symbol.
Note Durations:


Rests work the same way, just with different symbols.
-
Rest Durations:


Dotted Notes:
A Dot after a note indicates an elongation of the note by one-half of the original value of the note that the dot is attached to. For example, if a Half-note has a dot, this tells us that the duration is: Half-note + Quarter-note, or 2 beats + 1 beat (half of two) = 3 total beats.

Beamed notes:
Eighth, Sixteenth, Thirty-second, Sixty-fourth, and One Hundred Twenty-Eighth-notes will usually be beamed together when they are in groups.

Tied Notes:
Ties connect the durations of different notes together into one long note. In the following example a Whole-note is tied to a Quarter-note. The duration then becomes: Whole-note + Quarter-note. (Another way to think of it is: the length of four Quarter-notes + one Quarter-note).

Labels:
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duration,
music,
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note duration,
rest,
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tied note
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