Author: | Lynette Haddock | ISBN: | 9781310985515 |
Publisher: | Lynette Haddock | Publication: | October 23, 2015 |
Imprint: | Smashwords Edition | Language: | English |
Author: | Lynette Haddock |
ISBN: | 9781310985515 |
Publisher: | Lynette Haddock |
Publication: | October 23, 2015 |
Imprint: | Smashwords Edition |
Language: | English |
About the Book
The purpose of this short eBook is as a supplement in learning the basics of music PITCH. If you walk to a piano and play one note on the right side of the piano and one note on the left of the piano, you will hear a difference in pitch, the highness and lowness of sound. If a student of music wants to understand how musical pitch is written, this will supplement other information on the subject.
Concepts are presented sequentially in small, learning segments. The eBook covers treble staff, bass staff, line notes and space notes, notation of the important concept of silence in music, the music alphabet, the grand staff, ledger lines, moveable C clef, and the octave and octave signs. The keyboard and how it relates to the music staff is also explained, as well as accidentals, enharmonic equivalents and half steps and whole steps.
Excerpt From: Lynette Cobb Haddock. “Music Basics—Notating Pitch: A Little Help, PLEASE.” iBooks.
About the Book
The purpose of this short eBook is as a supplement in learning the basics of music PITCH. If you walk to a piano and play one note on the right side of the piano and one note on the left of the piano, you will hear a difference in pitch, the highness and lowness of sound. If a student of music wants to understand how musical pitch is written, this will supplement other information on the subject.
Concepts are presented sequentially in small, learning segments. The eBook covers treble staff, bass staff, line notes and space notes, notation of the important concept of silence in music, the music alphabet, the grand staff, ledger lines, moveable C clef, and the octave and octave signs. The keyboard and how it relates to the music staff is also explained, as well as accidentals, enharmonic equivalents and half steps and whole steps.
Excerpt From: Lynette Cobb Haddock. “Music Basics—Notating Pitch: A Little Help, PLEASE.” iBooks.