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How to read music - Tim Hansen

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    When we watch a film or a play,
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    we know that the actors
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    probably learned
    their lines from a script,
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    which essentially tells them
    what to say and when to say it.
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    A piece of written music
    operates on exactly the same principle.
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    In a very basic sense,
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    it tells a performer what to play
    and when to play it.
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    Aesthetically speaking,
    there's a world of difference
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    between, say, Beethoven and Justin Bieber,
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    but both artists have used
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    the same building blocks
    to create their music:
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    notes.
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    And although the end result
    can sound quite complicated,
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    the logic behind musical notes
    is actually pretty straightforward.
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    Let's take a look
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    at the foundational
    elements to music notation
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    and how they interact
    to create a work of art.
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    Music is written on five parallel lines
    that go across the page.
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    These five lines are called a staff,
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    and a staff operates on two axes:
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    up and down
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    and left to right.
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    The up-and-down axis tells the performer
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    the pitch of the note
    or what note to play,
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    and the left-to-right axis
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    tells the performer the rhythm of the note
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    or when to play it.
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    Let's start with pitch.
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    To help us out,
    we're going to use a piano,
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    but this system works for pretty much
    any instrument you can think of.
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    In the Western music tradition,
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    pitches are named after
    the first seven letters of the alphabet,
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    A, B, C,
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    D, E, F, and G.
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    After that, the cycle repeats itself:
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    A, B, C, D, E, F, G,
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    A, B, C, D, E, F, G,
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    and so on.
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    But how do these pitches get their names?
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    Well, for example, if you played an F
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    and then played another F
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    higher or lower on the piano,
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    you'd notice that they sound
    pretty similar
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    compared to, say, a B.
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    Going back to the staff,
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    every line and every space
    between two lines
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    represents a separate pitch.
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    If we put a note on one of these lines
    or one of these spaces,
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    we're telling a performer
    to play that pitch.
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    The higher up on the staff
    a note is placed,
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    the higher the pitch.
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    But there are obviously
    many, many more pitches
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    than the nine that these
    lines and spaces gives us.
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    A grand piano, for example,
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    can play 88 separate notes.
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    So how do we condense
    88 notes onto a single staff?
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    We use something called a clef,
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    a weird-looking figure
    placed at the beginning of the staff,
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    which acts like a reference point,
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    telling you that a particular
    line or space
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    corresponds to a specific note
    on your instrument.
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    If we want to play notes
    that aren't on the staff,
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    we kind of cheat and draw
    extra little lines
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    called ledger lines
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    and place the notes on them.
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    If we have to draw so many ledger lines
    that it gets confusing,
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    then we need to change
    to a different clef.
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    As for telling a performer
    when to play the notes,
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    two main elements control this:
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    the beat and the rhythm.
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    The beat of a piece of music is,
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    by itself, kind of boring.
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    It sounds like this.
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    (Ticking)
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    Notice that it doesn't change,
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    it just plugs along quite happily.
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    It can go slow
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    or fast
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    or whatever you like, really.
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    The point is that just
    like the second hand on a clock
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    divides one minute into sixty seconds,
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    with each second just as long
    as every other second,
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    the beat divides a piece of music
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    into little fragments of time
    that are all the same length:
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    beats.
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    With a steady beat as a foundation,
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    we can add rhythm to our pitches,
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    and that's when music
    really starts to happen.
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    This is a quarter note.
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    It's the most basic unit of rhythm,
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    and it's worth one beat.
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    This is a half note,
    and it's worth two beats.
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    This whole note here is worth four beats,
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    and these little guys are eighth notes,
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    worth half a beat each.
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    "Great," you say, "what does that mean?"
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    You might have noticed
    that across the length of a staff,
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    there are little lines dividing it
    into small sections.
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    These are bar lines
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    and we refer to each section as a bar.
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    At the beginning of a piece of music,
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    just after the clef,
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    is something called the time signature,
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    which tells a performer
    how many beats are in each bar.
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    This says there are two beats in each bar,
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    this says there are three,
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    this one four, and so on.
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    The bottom number tells
    us what kind of note
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    is to be used as the basic
    unit for the beat.
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    One corresponds to a whole note,
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    two to a half note,
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    four to a quarter note,
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    and eight to an eighth note, and so on.
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    So this time signature here
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    tells us that there are four
    quarter notes in each bar,
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    one, two, three, four;
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    one, two, three, four,
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    and so on.
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    But like I said before,
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    if we just stick to the beat,
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    it gets kind of boring,
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    so we'll replace some quarter notes
    with different rhythms.
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    Notice that even though
    the number of notes
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    in each bar has changed,
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    the total number of beats
    in each bar hasn't.
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    So, what does our musical
    creation sound like?
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    (Music)
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    Eh, sounds okay, but maybe
    a bit thin, right?
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    Let's add another instrument
    with its own pitch and rhythm.
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    Now it's sounding like music.
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    Sure, it takes some practice
    to get used to reading it quickly
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    and playing what we see on our instrument,
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    but, with a bit of time and patience,
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    you could be the next Beethoven
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    or Justin Bieber.
Title:
How to read music - Tim Hansen
Speaker:
Tim Hansen
Description:

Like an actor's script, a sheet of music instructs a musician on what to play (the pitch) and when to play it (the rhythm). Sheet music may look complicated, but once you've gotten the hang of a few simple elements like notes, bars and clefs, you're ready to rock. Tim Hansen hits the instrumental basics you need to read music.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
05:24
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