Reading Music: The Basics
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Transcript Reading Music: The Basics
Reading Music:
Sharps, Flats, and Keys
Mr. Test
Music Appreciation
TRHS South
Pitches on a Keyboard
The easiest way to understand pitches is to
look at a piano keyboard.
Here is a section of the piano keys, with some
common pitches highlighted:
Accidentals
Accidentals are symbols that tell musicians to
slightly raise or lower a pitch.
A sharp symbol looks like an italicized pound
sign, and raises the pitch:
A flat symbol looks like an italicized lowercase b,
and lowers the pitch:
A natural looks like a box with two extended
lines, and tells the musician to use the basic
(“natural”) pitch:
Accidentals Demonstrated:
Sharps
Going up (raising pitch): F to F-sharp
Accidentals Demonstrated:
Flats
Going down (lowering pitch): G to G-flat
Accidentals Demonstrated:
Naturals
(Middle) C-natural: bass & treble clefs
Reading & Writing Accidentals
Notice where the accidentals were placed in
the music?
Why is that?... (take a guess)
Since we read music from left to right,
musicians need to know if a note is sharp,
flat, or natural before analyzing the note
name.
Key Signatures
Often, due to the sound that composers and
songwriters are after, certain notes need to stay
sharp or flat for an entire work, or a section of a
work.
Instead of writing the accidentals next to every
single note, writers use a key signature.
A key signature is a set of one or more
sharps/flats placed at the beginning of the staff;
all of the notes with those NAMES (not just on
those lines & spaces!) stay sharp/flat unless a
natural sign is used.
Key Signature Example
Here is a sample key signature:
In the beginning of the song, it is placed after
the clef but before the time signature.
Remember, all of the notes with these NAMES
are now flat (B-E-A), even if they occur on
different lines/spaces/ledger lines.
Now do you see the importance of the natural
sign?
Key Changes During a Song
To change the mood at certain points, music
writers will often change the key signature in the
middle of a work. When that happens, a double
bar line is used, and naturals are used if
necessary.
Here is an (extreme) example: