WEBVTT 00:00:06.104 --> 00:00:07.858 When we watch a film or a play, 00:00:07.882 --> 00:00:09.000 we know that the actors 00:00:09.024 --> 00:00:11.032 probably learned their lines from a script, 00:00:11.056 --> 00:00:14.326 which essentially tells them what to say and when to say it. 00:00:15.080 --> 00:00:18.232 A piece of written music operates on exactly the same principle. 00:00:18.755 --> 00:00:20.091 In a very basic sense, 00:00:20.115 --> 00:00:23.179 it tells a performer what to play and when to play it. 00:00:23.901 --> 00:00:26.425 Aesthetically speaking, there's a world of difference 00:00:26.449 --> 00:00:29.379 between, say, Beethoven and Justin Bieber, 00:00:29.403 --> 00:00:30.642 but both artists have used 00:00:30.666 --> 00:00:33.148 the same building blocks to create their music: 00:00:33.172 --> 00:00:34.226 notes. 00:00:34.250 --> 00:00:36.877 And although the end result can sound quite complicated, 00:00:36.901 --> 00:00:40.415 the logic behind musical notes is actually pretty straightforward. 00:00:40.439 --> 00:00:41.447 Let's take a look 00:00:41.471 --> 00:00:43.662 at the foundational elements to music notation 00:00:43.686 --> 00:00:46.628 and how they interact to create a work of art. 00:00:47.684 --> 00:00:51.345 Music is written on five parallel lines that go across the page. 00:00:51.822 --> 00:00:53.901 These five lines are called a staff, 00:00:53.925 --> 00:00:56.194 and a staff operates on two axes: 00:00:56.218 --> 00:00:57.493 up and down 00:00:57.517 --> 00:00:58.721 and left to right. 00:00:59.258 --> 00:01:01.179 The up-and-down axis tells the performer 00:01:01.203 --> 00:01:03.912 the pitch of the note or what note to play, 00:01:03.936 --> 00:01:05.437 and the left-to-right axis 00:01:05.461 --> 00:01:07.531 tells the performer the rhythm of the note 00:01:07.555 --> 00:01:08.936 or when to play it. 00:01:09.436 --> 00:01:10.989 Let's start with pitch. 00:01:11.013 --> 00:01:13.037 To help us out, we're going to use a piano, 00:01:13.061 --> 00:01:16.388 but this system works for pretty much any instrument you can think of. 00:01:17.186 --> 00:01:18.805 In the Western music tradition, 00:01:18.829 --> 00:01:22.226 pitches are named after the first seven letters of the alphabet, 00:01:22.250 --> 00:01:23.693 A, B, C, 00:01:23.717 --> 00:01:25.678 D, E, F, and G. 00:01:26.446 --> 00:01:28.595 After that, the cycle repeats itself: 00:01:28.619 --> 00:01:30.634 A, B, C, D, E, F, G, 00:01:30.658 --> 00:01:31.992 A, B, C, D, E, F, G, 00:01:32.016 --> 00:01:33.079 and so on. 00:01:33.564 --> 00:01:35.660 But how do these pitches get their names? 00:01:36.199 --> 00:01:38.269 Well, for example, if you played an F 00:01:38.293 --> 00:01:39.484 and then played another F 00:01:39.508 --> 00:01:41.192 higher or lower on the piano, 00:01:41.216 --> 00:01:43.264 you'd notice that they sound pretty similar 00:01:43.288 --> 00:01:45.064 compared to, say, a B. 00:01:45.738 --> 00:01:46.955 Going back to the staff, 00:01:46.979 --> 00:01:49.649 every line and every space between two lines 00:01:49.673 --> 00:01:51.325 represents a separate pitch. 00:01:52.051 --> 00:01:55.107 If we put a note on one of these lines or one of these spaces, 00:01:55.131 --> 00:01:57.658 we're telling a performer to play that pitch. 00:01:57.682 --> 00:02:00.009 The higher up on the staff a note is placed, 00:02:00.033 --> 00:02:01.412 the higher the pitch. 00:02:01.436 --> 00:02:03.913 But there are obviously many, many more pitches 00:02:03.937 --> 00:02:06.587 than the nine that these lines and spaces gives us. 00:02:06.611 --> 00:02:08.140 A grand piano, for example, 00:02:08.164 --> 00:02:09.818 can play 88 separate notes. 00:02:10.281 --> 00:02:13.281 So how do we condense 88 notes onto a single staff? 00:02:13.774 --> 00:02:15.981 We use something called a clef, 00:02:16.005 --> 00:02:18.974 a weird-looking figure placed at the beginning of the staff, 00:02:18.998 --> 00:02:20.678 which acts like a reference point, 00:02:20.702 --> 00:02:22.804 telling you that a particular line or space 00:02:22.828 --> 00:02:25.582 corresponds to a specific note on your instrument. 00:02:25.606 --> 00:02:27.964 If we want to play notes that aren't on the staff, 00:02:27.988 --> 00:02:30.111 we kind of cheat and draw extra little lines 00:02:30.135 --> 00:02:31.354 called ledger lines 00:02:31.378 --> 00:02:33.076 and place the notes on them. 00:02:33.100 --> 00:02:36.449 If we have to draw so many ledger lines that it gets confusing, 00:02:36.473 --> 00:02:38.748 then we need to change to a different clef. 00:02:39.872 --> 00:02:42.206 As for telling a performer when to play the notes, 00:02:42.230 --> 00:02:44.101 two main elements control this: 00:02:44.125 --> 00:02:46.043 the beat and the rhythm. 00:02:46.473 --> 00:02:48.053 The beat of a piece of music is, 00:02:48.077 --> 00:02:50.000 by itself, kind of boring. 00:02:50.024 --> 00:02:51.713 It sounds like this. 00:02:52.348 --> 00:02:53.577 (Ticking) 00:02:54.173 --> 00:02:55.649 Notice that it doesn't change, 00:02:55.673 --> 00:02:57.961 it just plugs along quite happily. 00:02:57.985 --> 00:02:59.030 It can go slow 00:03:00.546 --> 00:03:01.625 or fast 00:03:02.490 --> 00:03:03.910 or whatever you like, really. 00:03:03.934 --> 00:03:06.604 The point is that just like the second hand on a clock 00:03:06.628 --> 00:03:09.172 divides one minute into sixty seconds, 00:03:09.196 --> 00:03:12.185 with each second just as long as every other second, 00:03:12.209 --> 00:03:13.974 the beat divides a piece of music 00:03:13.998 --> 00:03:17.092 into little fragments of time that are all the same length: 00:03:17.116 --> 00:03:18.138 beats. 00:03:18.826 --> 00:03:20.550 With a steady beat as a foundation, 00:03:20.574 --> 00:03:22.190 we can add rhythm to our pitches, 00:03:22.214 --> 00:03:24.366 and that's when music really starts to happen. 00:03:25.413 --> 00:03:27.032 This is a quarter note. 00:03:27.056 --> 00:03:28.769 It's the most basic unit of rhythm, 00:03:28.793 --> 00:03:30.271 and it's worth one beat. 00:03:30.749 --> 00:03:33.292 This is a half note, and it's worth two beats. 00:03:33.316 --> 00:03:35.413 This whole note here is worth four beats, 00:03:35.437 --> 00:03:37.354 and these little guys are eighth notes, 00:03:37.378 --> 00:03:38.713 worth half a beat each. 00:03:39.409 --> 00:03:41.829 "Great," you say, "what does that mean?" 00:03:41.853 --> 00:03:44.527 You might have noticed that across the length of a staff, 00:03:44.551 --> 00:03:47.215 there are little lines dividing it into small sections. 00:03:47.239 --> 00:03:48.926 These are bar lines 00:03:48.950 --> 00:03:51.355 and we refer to each section as a bar. 00:03:51.955 --> 00:03:53.718 At the beginning of a piece of music, 00:03:53.742 --> 00:03:54.843 just after the clef, 00:03:54.867 --> 00:03:56.939 is something called the time signature, 00:03:56.963 --> 00:03:59.985 which tells a performer how many beats are in each bar. 00:04:00.009 --> 00:04:02.154 This says there are two beats in each bar, 00:04:02.178 --> 00:04:03.500 this says there are three, 00:04:03.524 --> 00:04:05.572 this one four, and so on. 00:04:05.596 --> 00:04:07.861 The bottom number tells us what kind of note 00:04:07.885 --> 00:04:10.332 is to be used as the basic unit for the beat. 00:04:10.800 --> 00:04:12.488 One corresponds to a whole note, 00:04:12.512 --> 00:04:13.618 two to a half note, 00:04:13.642 --> 00:04:15.546 four to a quarter note, 00:04:15.570 --> 00:04:17.527 and eight to an eighth note, and so on. 00:04:17.958 --> 00:04:19.305 So this time signature here 00:04:19.329 --> 00:04:22.101 tells us that there are four quarter notes in each bar, 00:04:22.125 --> 00:04:24.053 one, two, three, four; 00:04:24.077 --> 00:04:25.617 one, two, three, four, 00:04:25.641 --> 00:04:26.697 and so on. 00:04:27.173 --> 00:04:28.337 But like I said before, 00:04:28.361 --> 00:04:29.800 if we just stick to the beat, 00:04:29.824 --> 00:04:31.355 it gets kind of boring, 00:04:31.379 --> 00:04:34.242 so we'll replace some quarter notes with different rhythms. 00:04:34.913 --> 00:04:36.913 Notice that even though the number of notes 00:04:36.937 --> 00:04:38.402 in each bar has changed, 00:04:38.426 --> 00:04:40.998 the total number of beats in each bar hasn't. 00:04:42.112 --> 00:04:45.350 So, what does our musical creation sound like? 00:04:45.374 --> 00:04:47.736 (Music) 00:04:47.760 --> 00:04:51.052 Eh, sounds okay, but maybe a bit thin, right? 00:04:51.076 --> 00:04:53.969 Let's add another instrument with its own pitch and rhythm. 00:04:54.435 --> 00:04:56.611 Now it's sounding like music. 00:04:57.789 --> 00:05:00.766 Sure, it takes some practice to get used to reading it quickly 00:05:00.790 --> 00:05:02.798 and playing what we see on our instrument, 00:05:02.822 --> 00:05:04.584 but, with a bit of time and patience, 00:05:04.608 --> 00:05:06.355 you could be the next Beethoven 00:05:06.379 --> 00:05:08.484 or Justin Bieber.