Rhythmic feel.
6/8 is more common for music played with guitars since in a 6/8 strumming pattern your downstrum happens 6 times per measure, it's therefore a different rhythmic feel compared to 3/4.
3/4 is for pieces that want 3 beats in a bar, like waltzes. They also like 3/8 for similar reasons.
6/8 is a two-beat that gets used a lot in marches, for example the Liberty Bell march.
top number is the number of beats per measure, button is what kind of note = 1 beat, so I this case the eighth note is, meaning that every note is twice it's usual length from typical 4/4 time. Maybe I'm wrong, I did music theory for a while but completely forgot about it already
I dont really know music theory deeply but i can read music rather okay, and play in an amateur big band.
I got lost in your explanation. Yes, the top number indicates the amount of notes/figures per beat , and as far as I understand, the bottom one indicates which figure is the one reffered to at the top. In this case, it says every measure fits six eighths or quavers.
You know its a waltz-ish kind of tempo because you can divide the measure in ONE-two-three's.
Its also confusing because the music sheet starts at an upbeat which means its just the second half 9f the measure.
It doesn't have anything to do with length of notes, it's just to allow subdivision by 3.
Time signatures with a 4 on the bottom have beats that are easily divided into halves. Time signatures with an 8 on the bottom have beats that are easily divided into thirds, which seems a bit counterintuitive at first, but hopefully this will help.
There are also time signatures with a 16 on the bottom for when they really want to frick you up.
Both answers are wrong.
Tempo is how fast the music is. Usually it's given in Italian, but these days people also frequently give you a BPM marking that looks like pic related.
In this case the tempo is 60 bpm, where each beat corresponds to one crotchet (the note to the left of the number), so every crotchet is 1 second long. That's your tempo.
In other time signatures the marking uses other notes, but the general principle is the same, just with different units for the beat.
>there is no real fundamental difference between tempos of the same general speed >grave, lento, large are pretty much all the fricking same and will depend on the conductor >might as well not fricking matter because most conductors will do whatever the frick they want >like Bernstein's performance of Shostakovich's 5th was so fast the man himself said "That is not how I wrote it, but the best I've ever heard it"
>it really IS probably the best version of it
maybe it doesn't have soul or whatever but yeah, BPM is just more useful in modern times. Conductor still going to ignore it though lel
>everyone should learn how to read music
everyone is literally taught
what the frick were you doing for 8 or 10 years of compulsory music classes in school?
I listen to video game music for fun among many other genres and I can play very advanced music on electric bass, but I can't read sheet music because my mind has some kind of weird dyslexia with it and I just cannot get it.
That's fair if you're used to playing electric bass, I read music for saxophone but on trying to read it for guitar always sucks since you can play the same note a multitude of ways. No clue how orchestras do it.
Well sorry, I didn't have things or get lessons for things. Gotta squeeze and entire childhood and teenagehood worth of lessons into an adult brain. Not a very good one either
>Solfege is common in europe supposedly.
here in europe?
I'm technically in europe and never hear anyone that studies music refer to the notes this way. Hell, even in highschool you're taught the actual notes by name and the intervals to a scale, not solfege. Who the frick is teaching solfege?
My uni taught me solfege which is also where they said you EUs use it. Im not sure why. Although the uni i went to was a pretty religious one which is probably a factor.
homie solfege is much better than dumb letters, why the frick does the letter start on C
2 years ago
Anonymous
at least it has a fricking logical order after that
2 years ago
Anonymous
>he can't memorize 7 syllables
how did you memorize the alphabeth?
2 years ago
Anonymous
i can memorize them, they're just a pain in the ass to use to read sheet music.
i swear to god i finally managed to learn to read music at an acceptable speed in my 20s once i dropped solfege and mnemonics.
2 years ago
Anonymous
> just a pain in the ass to use to read sheet music.
holy brainlet
2 years ago
Anonymous
solfege is moronic. good on you. sometimes teachers just teach without thinking.
2 years ago
Anonymous
that's public education for you.
2 years ago
Anonymous
solfege is perfect if you speak a latin based language, because the note names are the tone
2 years ago
Anonymous
The names are the tone as well in standard notation.
2 years ago
Anonymous
Major scale starts at C.
2 years ago
Anonymous
why not make do A then
2 years ago
Anonymous
There are scales that start on A.
2 years ago
Anonymous
you still didn't answer why do isn't A
2 years ago
Anonymous
If you're asking why it's called middle C with not instead of middle A and why C has no accidentals then idk. There's probably some limitation back in 1000s. Even googling it doesn't give me the answer I'm looking for.
2 years ago
Anonymous
Then minor scale will have to start at F from the previous octave and that's fricking lame.
2 years ago
Anonymous
and starting from C isnt?
2 years ago
Anonymous
There's 12 different major scales, one for each note; 2 2 1 2 2 2 1; start at tonic, whole step, whole step, half step, whole step, whole step, whole step, half step
2 years ago
Anonymous
>Not think of scales as numbers
moron
2 years ago
Anonymous
The letters start on A, it's solfege that starts on C. This is why solfege is moronic to learn.
I'm European myself and everyone I know refers to the notes by name, not letters. I always saw the letter notation as more of an English thing.
2 years ago
Anonymous
it is an english thing, most of the world use solfege
2 years ago
Anonymous
This sounds wrong
2 years ago
Anonymous
I cant find the original image so take this terrible resolution: green is solfege, blue C D E F G A B C, red C D E F G A H C, purple 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
2 years ago
Anonymous
2 years ago
Anonymous
based, thanks, it's even more than the first map
2 years ago
Anonymous
how is Do Re Mi not universal? I am absolutely fricking floored by this. This can't be real
2 years ago
Anonymous
Because it's fricking stupid, just give me the fricking note like my DAW uses
2 years ago
Anonymous
In the US we're taught "do re mi fa so la ti do" as a pseudo-song but we definitely don't read sheet music using those names
2 years ago
Anonymous
Fricking disgusting anglos and germanoids, what do you have to say for yourselves?
2 years ago
Anonymous
this is blatantly wrong
im in switzerland, went to several music schools learning different instruments over more than a decade and it and it NEVER was CDEFGAB it was CDEFGAH
and doremi is only used orally if you need to convey a specific tone
2 years ago
Anonymous
It's not blatently wrong, it got you, dog-eaters, half right.
2 years ago
Anonymous
Pretty interesting. Probably not exactly the same but I find numbers more useful here in US than solfege since it's often about chords or inversions >Russia extremely skews it
ebin
well, at least I can joke about it now haha just had to throw that bit o context out there
I think I got have the melody, but I don't know the notes. So it's generic blahhhh bluhhhh blahblehbleh blehblehbleh blohh blah
or somethin
Yes, there is where it explains the approach but it's still probably the hardest puzzle in any fricking video game. Also it gets even harder on harder difficulties.
No. Any game that rewards you for using background knowledge from your regular life makes life a little more worthwhile, even if it's trivia about fields you've never been interested in.
Yes, there is another email that explains how to solve it, but you can technically solve just using the key and the encripted message. It's a 4 digit code mixed into fictional names for songs, sometimes it's the number directly number and some other times it's spelled, like three, six, two, etc.
I was so disappointed that it highlighted the key you are currently playing which complete trivializes the puzzle.
I was actually excited when I first saw it.
If you want to play by ear and learn jazz/inprov technique, learn intervals (& scales)
If you want to communicate with other musicians and perform music recitals and covers, learn the letter note names and sheet music.
If you want to become a singer, learn via solfege (but you're better off learning either of the above instead anyway, honestly)
What's the best way to get back into playing piano? I used to be decent mechanically but I was a dumb kid that didn't pay attention to theory so I don't understand how anything fits together. I don't really want to go back to autistically memorizing sheet music and brute forcing my way through the song. What's a good way to pick up theory? Are there good MIT OCW courses?
Learn intervals, practice scales and intervals and do a lot of improvising to keep it fun. This'll give you far greater ability at playing by ear which is more useful than reading sheet music is.
I consider myself a decent musician but I never learned how to read music competently. I can understand it if I sit down and study it slowly but reading it on the fly is beyond me, I guess I was spoiled by guitar tabs.
kek, I took like 2 years of theory but I play trombone and euph, so I still can't quickly transpose treble in my head since I'm in bass 99.99999% of the time.
I could play that, but I couldn't on the spot tell you the notes without mentally counting lel
At least that one gives you the music you're supposed to play. Ion Fury expected you to know you were supposed to plunk out the secret found jingle with no indication.
Why the frick are you morons talking about fixed Do that always starts at C and not moveable Do that is actually useful and actually used? They only teach fixed Do so that literal children can get a grasp of it before being taught about actual music theory.
Scale degrees are the primary analytical tool, absolute notes are secondary. You can transpose a melodic idea to literally any scale and still use solfege without giving a single frick about the exact notes. Try doing that with note names.
I refuse to learn musical notation out of spite. t. tablature chad
If you’re not a complete beginner, and still use tabs instead of figuring out the song you want to play by ear, or better yet making your own music, you’re shit and should just quit.
is it 7? cause if so the logic is something a kid would figure out. First digit of the pair is multiples of 2(8,16[skip]32,64[skip]128) but you can ignore that pretty much. Second digit are 0 - 3 - 5 - ? all the odd numbers(not 0), concluding 7
I did. In every public primary school in my state there's a once per week band class taken by professional music teachers during years 5 and 6. Every kid gets lent an instrument for 2 years, and then at the end of year 6 they can buy the instrument outright at a heavy discount if they can't afford a real one and want to keep playing.
No, they're sequential. If they want you to play more than one note at the same time they're vertically aligned (there are a bunch on the page behind it)
The way the notes are joined in the OP is just to make the groups easier to read.
The ones with tails are half the duration of the ones with straight stems. The ones that are connected are the same as the ones with tails. They're connected to each other because it makes them easier to read.
The other notes are not connected to each other because only the ones with tails get connected, and even then they won't connect them across bar lines (again just to make them easier to read)
I HAVE NO FRICKING CLUE what anyone in this thread is talking about except that im supposed to know how to read music, is this from RE village? googled that shit and left a negative review just because of it
i hate rhythm i hate it so goddamn much i'm so fricking bad at it. it's nearly impossible for me to subdivide time in my head properly so I have to grind forever so my ANDs are right in the middle of beats (1 AND 2 AND 3 AND 4). it took a half hour of clapping like a moron with my instructor to get the timing of 3 beats against 1 with the third beat tied to the next beat. i bought rhythm doctor thinking it might be good practice but i couldn't beat the first boss because i can't fricking keep time even in a game where i just have to press a single button against the 7th beat of every measure WITH NO CHANGES IN THE RHYTHM. i'm so fricking bad at music period but i can't give up now because i'm also too dumb to quit
my piano has a metronome that i use and I also have a vibrating one I use every so often if I really can't get a feel for the pulses. at this point i'm thinking of just wearing headphones for a day and just having a metronome playing in the background just to see if it helps at all
What instrument do you play?
Try practicing with a metronome regularly. Use a DAW to record yourself during practice. Ideally, find a MIDI of a song you're trying to learn so you can see how the notes are subdivided (although this may be a bit hard if you're a complete newbie to music, since it assumes you know what the tempo/time signature is of the song and how to import it properly...), it really helps to have a good teacher that lets you learn things more practically rather than clapping like a mongoloid which won't teach you shit.
piano. I should try playing along to stuff again, last time I attempted it was when i was much fresher. >it really helps to have a good teacher that lets you learn things more practically rather than clapping like a mongoloid which won't teach you shit.
we ended up clapping because I couldn't get the rhythm right at the keys after about an eternity. we've tried foot tapping while I was playing but i literally can't coordinate my hands and foot on time
>we've tried foot tapping while I was playing but i literally can't coordinate my hands and foot on time
Try nodding your head or swaying your body to the beat whilst you play. Getting a good sense of rhythm is tricky when you're new as it's not something you can force, you just have to 'feel' it. It my help if you actively listen to more music, especially music that relates to whatever you're trying to play.
What instrument do you play?
Try practicing with a metronome regularly. Use a DAW to record yourself during practice. Ideally, find a MIDI of a song you're trying to learn so you can see how the notes are subdivided (although this may be a bit hard if you're a complete newbie to music, since it assumes you know what the tempo/time signature is of the song and how to import it properly...), it really helps to have a good teacher that lets you learn things more practically rather than clapping like a mongoloid which won't teach you shit.
When I'm struggling to subdivide I practice with a metronome set to double the real tempo so it clicks half beats for me. Other than that you'll just learn what rhythms are meant to sound like over time. There are only a few patterns that come up again and again, and then the rest is just mixing and matching.
everyone should learn how to read music tables, its the easiest shit ever, just look at where the clef starts, that is the sol note, and go from there
I don't understand tempo.
look at the fraction next to the clef, in this case 6/8, the bottom is the important thing so 8 = eighth note or , 4 is the classic quarter or
I don't understand that.
What exactly is the rhythm?
every straight note takes twice while a note with a flag is one beat
what's the difference between 3/4 and 6/8
Rhythmic feel.
6/8 is more common for music played with guitars since in a 6/8 strumming pattern your downstrum happens 6 times per measure, it's therefore a different rhythmic feel compared to 3/4.
lmao this is pure bullshit
What a worthless post.
3/4 is for pieces that want 3 beats in a bar, like waltzes. They also like 3/8 for similar reasons.
6/8 is a two-beat that gets used a lot in marches, for example the Liberty Bell march.
top number is the number of beats per measure, button is what kind of note = 1 beat, so I this case the eighth note is, meaning that every note is twice it's usual length from typical 4/4 time. Maybe I'm wrong, I did music theory for a while but completely forgot about it already
I dont really know music theory deeply but i can read music rather okay, and play in an amateur big band.
I got lost in your explanation. Yes, the top number indicates the amount of notes/figures per beat , and as far as I understand, the bottom one indicates which figure is the one reffered to at the top. In this case, it says every measure fits six eighths or quavers.
You know its a waltz-ish kind of tempo because you can divide the measure in ONE-two-three's.
Its also confusing because the music sheet starts at an upbeat which means its just the second half 9f the measure.
It doesn't have anything to do with length of notes, it's just to allow subdivision by 3.
Time signatures with a 4 on the bottom have beats that are easily divided into halves. Time signatures with an 8 on the bottom have beats that are easily divided into thirds, which seems a bit counterintuitive at first, but hopefully this will help.
There are also time signatures with a 16 on the bottom for when they really want to frick you up.
Both answers are wrong.
Tempo is how fast the music is. Usually it's given in Italian, but these days people also frequently give you a BPM marking that looks like pic related.
In this case the tempo is 60 bpm, where each beat corresponds to one crotchet (the note to the left of the number), so every crotchet is 1 second long. That's your tempo.
In other time signatures the marking uses other notes, but the general principle is the same, just with different units for the beat.
>Both answers are wrong.
anon was asking what the tempo on that sheet was, both explanations are right
Tempo is not time signature.
and what does the time signature tells you?
It tells you the beats to a bar, it does not tell you the tempo.
How many beats are in a measure.
6 beats in an 8 beat measure
That's the time signature not the tempo, though.
There is no tempo in the OP's image. There's a 6/8 time signature but that honestly has nothing to do with the puzzle anyway.
>there is no real fundamental difference between tempos of the same general speed
>grave, lento, large are pretty much all the fricking same and will depend on the conductor
>might as well not fricking matter because most conductors will do whatever the frick they want
>like Bernstein's performance of Shostakovich's 5th was so fast the man himself said "That is not how I wrote it, but the best I've ever heard it"
>it really IS probably the best version of it
maybe it doesn't have soul or whatever but yeah, BPM is just more useful in modern times. Conductor still going to ignore it though lel
>just look at where the clef starts, that is the sol note, and go from there
in english doc
the G looking thing at the start, where the line ends, in this case the second line from bottom to top, is the G note or sol for non moronic people
It stats on fa though
you are correct, but it never start on an open space, only lines
If the key signature is correct, it's either in the key of C, making C (the first note) do, or in it's relative minor (not likely) which is A minor.
Bro Sol is the 5th to the root, the only time it's going to be G is if you're in C major.
tell me you don't know music without telling me
The note that Sol is on if you're in any key other than C is not going to be G. Sol in the key of F is C, not G, so it's incorrect to say Sol is G.
That's called the treble clef.
you really don't know how to real a music sheet my friend
I really do, anon.
sol is literally g you brainlet
If you're asked to play or sing Sol when you're not in C and you play or sing G you'll be incorrect.
*ahem*
Movable solfege
Yeah, the one everyone does. I've been in band and choirs for the past 17 years and nobody does it fixed.
> I've been in band and choirs for the past 17 years and nobody does it fixed.
and yet you still a brainlet
It's more brainlet to pretend anybody does fixed do in the past 100 years.
your starting complaint was
, moving the thing doesn't invalidate that anon explanation
g clef = sol clef you moron
>mfw schools teach you to use mnemonics
most moronic way to learn this
Why are you naming the notes this way?
This isn't The Sound of Music lads, call them by their more common names.
any online resources for me to learn
“Michael New” on YouTube. His explanation just clicked for me
>everyone should learn how to read music
everyone is literally taught
what the frick were you doing for 8 or 10 years of compulsory music classes in school?
>everyone is literally taught
where
simply didnt attend if i dont want to learn then i wont
Ogey
https://voca.ro/1hdqINLLDpwl
The people who can't solve this are the same people who listen to video game music for fun.
I listen to video game music for fun among many other genres and I can play very advanced music on electric bass, but I can't read sheet music because my mind has some kind of weird dyslexia with it and I just cannot get it.
That's fair if you're used to playing electric bass, I read music for saxophone but on trying to read it for guitar always sucks since you can play the same note a multitude of ways. No clue how orchestras do it.
I just hate tabs that use letter and not notes, frick anyone who does this
Well sorry, I didn't have things or get lessons for things. Gotta squeeze and entire childhood and teenagehood worth of lessons into an adult brain. Not a very good one either
every single person who thinks its So EaSy to read music are people who got lessons when they were kids
it is not easy and is equivalent to learning to read foreign script
Maybe if youre sightreading.
Solfege is common in europe supposedly. I was forced to learn it in college but I dont know anyone that uses it.
>Solfege is common in europe supposedly.
here in europe?
I'm technically in europe and never hear anyone that studies music refer to the notes this way. Hell, even in highschool you're taught the actual notes by name and the intervals to a scale, not solfege. Who the frick is teaching solfege?
solfege fricking pisses me off, C D E F G A B at least has some sort of continuity
they taught me in elementary school
so it's a US thing?
no, in canada.
My uni taught me solfege which is also where they said you EUs use it. Im not sure why. Although the uni i went to was a pretty religious one which is probably a factor.
homie solfege is much better than dumb letters, why the frick does the letter start on C
at least it has a fricking logical order after that
>he can't memorize 7 syllables
how did you memorize the alphabeth?
i can memorize them, they're just a pain in the ass to use to read sheet music.
i swear to god i finally managed to learn to read music at an acceptable speed in my 20s once i dropped solfege and mnemonics.
> just a pain in the ass to use to read sheet music.
holy brainlet
solfege is moronic. good on you. sometimes teachers just teach without thinking.
that's public education for you.
solfege is perfect if you speak a latin based language, because the note names are the tone
The names are the tone as well in standard notation.
Major scale starts at C.
why not make do A then
There are scales that start on A.
you still didn't answer why do isn't A
If you're asking why it's called middle C with not instead of middle A and why C has no accidentals then idk. There's probably some limitation back in 1000s. Even googling it doesn't give me the answer I'm looking for.
Then minor scale will have to start at F from the previous octave and that's fricking lame.
and starting from C isnt?
There's 12 different major scales, one for each note; 2 2 1 2 2 2 1; start at tonic, whole step, whole step, half step, whole step, whole step, whole step, half step
>Not think of scales as numbers
moron
The letters start on A, it's solfege that starts on C. This is why solfege is moronic to learn.
Intervals > numbering 1-12 > note letters C-G >>>> solfege
>it's solfege that starts on C
and every single tab ever use it
But that's wrong
I'm European myself and everyone I know refers to the notes by name, not letters. I always saw the letter notation as more of an English thing.
it is an english thing, most of the world use solfege
This sounds wrong
I cant find the original image so take this terrible resolution: green is solfege, blue C D E F G A B C, red C D E F G A H C, purple 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
based, thanks, it's even more than the first map
how is Do Re Mi not universal? I am absolutely fricking floored by this. This can't be real
Because it's fricking stupid, just give me the fricking note like my DAW uses
In the US we're taught "do re mi fa so la ti do" as a pseudo-song but we definitely don't read sheet music using those names
Fricking disgusting anglos and germanoids, what do you have to say for yourselves?
this is blatantly wrong
im in switzerland, went to several music schools learning different instruments over more than a decade and it and it NEVER was CDEFGAB it was CDEFGAH
and doremi is only used orally if you need to convey a specific tone
It's not blatently wrong, it got you, dog-eaters, half right.
Pretty interesting. Probably not exactly the same but I find numbers more useful here in US than solfege since it's often about chords or inversions
>Russia extremely skews it
ebin
well, at least I can joke about it now haha just had to throw that bit o context out there
I think I got have the melody, but I don't know the notes. So it's generic blahhhh bluhhhh blahblehbleh blehblehbleh blohh blah
or somethin
It's the simpson meddley
more
But of course
I love her so much. I'm sad I missed out on her fig.
I like her too, but I much prefer my wife Neru.
My team is Neru, Hina, Mutsuki, Hoshino.
why does she dress like that?
maybe her butt hurts
>in 6/8
>but two of the bars only have 3 beats
i ain't solving this jank shit
>what is an anacrusis?
Music education should be mandatory.
why?
so brainlets like you can understand rhythm and read music sheets
>can understand rhythm and read music sheets
but why
So you can have more culture than a literal swine, you literal swine
It teaches life lessons like discipline and teamwork.
CGBAADCDEE
You are able to solve this easy riddle, right?
You lost me with everything below the "octave keys:" part, is there more context for this?
Yes, there is where it explains the approach but it's still probably the hardest puzzle in any fricking video game. Also it gets even harder on harder difficulties.
name the game
underrail
>puzzle requires esoteric knowledge
people should be castrated for this shit
ANY puzzle in a video game should be solveable using only knowledge from the video game
it is an entertainment product you frickin wienersuckers
It was actually fun to do. But there has to be a clearer template how to do it.
i dont even understand enough about music theory to understand what its asking how its solved or anything
and i can play an instrument well
>basic music theory
>esoteric knowledge
dumb redditspacer
typical plebeian
No. Any game that rewards you for using background knowledge from your regular life makes life a little more worthwhile, even if it's trivia about fields you've never been interested in.
is all the info needed to solve the puzzle in the picture so I can send it contextless to a friend
Hell no.
You'd need to read a 10 page cryptic email
Yes, there is another email that explains how to solve it, but you can technically solve just using the key and the encripted message. It's a 4 digit code mixed into fictional names for songs, sometimes it's the number directly number and some other times it's spelled, like three, six, two, etc.
Yes.
such a garbage game
I was so disappointed that it highlighted the key you are currently playing which complete trivializes the puzzle.
I was actually excited when I first saw it.
Hows this?
https://vocaroo.com/16pu3bAQL3Y3
That's RE8, right? I beat the game and I don't remember this and I can't read sheet, so it must be solvable in another way
you can solve it by trial and error
If you want to play by ear and learn jazz/inprov technique, learn intervals (& scales)
If you want to communicate with other musicians and perform music recitals and covers, learn the letter note names and sheet music.
If you want to become a singer, learn via solfege (but you're better off learning either of the above instead anyway, honestly)
This is irrefutable.
What's the best way to get back into playing piano? I used to be decent mechanically but I was a dumb kid that didn't pay attention to theory so I don't understand how anything fits together. I don't really want to go back to autistically memorizing sheet music and brute forcing my way through the song. What's a good way to pick up theory? Are there good MIT OCW courses?
Learn intervals, practice scales and intervals and do a lot of improvising to keep it fun. This'll give you far greater ability at playing by ear which is more useful than reading sheet music is.
I consider myself a decent musician but I never learned how to read music competently. I can understand it if I sit down and study it slowly but reading it on the fly is beyond me, I guess I was spoiled by guitar tabs.
itt people with doctorates in music arguing about things you learn in your first year of music
kek, I took like 2 years of theory but I play trombone and euph, so I still can't quickly transpose treble in my head since I'm in bass 99.99999% of the time.
I could play that, but I couldn't on the spot tell you the notes without mentally counting lel
pidgeons can solve crossword puzzles, and you're telling humans with no music background couldn't solve this?
in a world full of instant gratification something like this is pointless to invest time into if you had no prior interest in music theory before
you can smash whatever key and see which parts light up, bros... are we dumber than birds?
I mean brute forcing it is the most obvious way to get through, but that's not the point of this thread.
I am.
You should also be able to solve this one too.
yabai
At least that one gives you the music you're supposed to play. Ion Fury expected you to know you were supposed to plunk out the secret found jingle with no indication.
there's a hint to it somewhere
I never bothered but i definitely remember people talking about a hint to it
Why the frick are you morons talking about fixed Do that always starts at C and not moveable Do that is actually useful and actually used? They only teach fixed Do so that literal children can get a grasp of it before being taught about actual music theory.
Scale degrees are the primary analytical tool, absolute notes are secondary. You can transpose a melodic idea to literally any scale and still use solfege without giving a single frick about the exact notes. Try doing that with note names.
Fourth from root in C Maj: Fa / F
Fourth from root in A# Maj: Fa / D#
Fourth from root in D Lydian: Fi / G#
Solfege
C
I refuse to learn musical notation out of spite. t. tablature chad
Based and same, fellow tabGOD
If you’re not a complete beginner, and still use tabs instead of figuring out the song you want to play by ear, or better yet making your own music, you’re shit and should just quit.
this, unless you're a tone deaf moronGOD, with enough experience that shit is useless
Tab is genuinely moronic. Probably the worst way to learn music.
https://onlinesequencer.net/2906825
11 year olds should be able to solve this
is it 7? cause if so the logic is something a kid would figure out. First digit of the pair is multiples of 2(8,16[skip]32,64[skip]128) but you can ignore that pretty much. Second digit are 0 - 3 - 5 - ? all the odd numbers(not 0), concluding 7
did you guys really have music classes in elementary?
yeah but they were absolutely worthless
I did. In every public primary school in my state there's a once per week band class taken by professional music teachers during years 5 and 6. Every kid gets lent an instrument for 2 years, and then at the end of year 6 they can buy the instrument outright at a heavy discount if they can't afford a real one and want to keep playing.
God I wish they did that here
I can sing it in my head but I don't recognize the tune
"CGBAADCDEE"?
What?
Do you press three keys at the same time when trying to play either of those middle triple notes?
No, they're sequential. If they want you to play more than one note at the same time they're vertically aligned (there are a bunch on the page behind it)
The way the notes are joined in the OP is just to make the groups easier to read.
(me)
>just to make the groups easier to read
Compared to having 6 free-standing quavers, that is (the ones with the tail things).
But why are they connected unlike the two far left ones?
The ones with tails are half the duration of the ones with straight stems. The ones that are connected are the same as the ones with tails. They're connected to each other because it makes them easier to read.
The other notes are not connected to each other because only the ones with tails get connected, and even then they won't connect them across bar lines (again just to make them easier to read)
So its basically for easier reading? Thanks.
C, G, B, A, A, D, C, D, E, E
you should be able to solve this without your aunt's help
A
I HAVE NO FRICKING CLUE what anyone in this thread is talking about except that im supposed to know how to read music, is this from RE village? googled that shit and left a negative review just because of it
I remember playing this but I can't remember what game it actually was. Zero escape?
i hate rhythm i hate it so goddamn much i'm so fricking bad at it. it's nearly impossible for me to subdivide time in my head properly so I have to grind forever so my ANDs are right in the middle of beats (1 AND 2 AND 3 AND 4). it took a half hour of clapping like a moron with my instructor to get the timing of 3 beats against 1 with the third beat tied to the next beat. i bought rhythm doctor thinking it might be good practice but i couldn't beat the first boss because i can't fricking keep time even in a game where i just have to press a single button against the 7th beat of every measure WITH NO CHANGES IN THE RHYTHM. i'm so fricking bad at music period but i can't give up now because i'm also too dumb to quit
Get a metronome or use an online equivalent.
my piano has a metronome that i use and I also have a vibrating one I use every so often if I really can't get a feel for the pulses. at this point i'm thinking of just wearing headphones for a day and just having a metronome playing in the background just to see if it helps at all
piano. I should try playing along to stuff again, last time I attempted it was when i was much fresher.
>it really helps to have a good teacher that lets you learn things more practically rather than clapping like a mongoloid which won't teach you shit.
we ended up clapping because I couldn't get the rhythm right at the keys after about an eternity. we've tried foot tapping while I was playing but i literally can't coordinate my hands and foot on time
>we've tried foot tapping while I was playing but i literally can't coordinate my hands and foot on time
Try nodding your head or swaying your body to the beat whilst you play. Getting a good sense of rhythm is tricky when you're new as it's not something you can force, you just have to 'feel' it. It my help if you actively listen to more music, especially music that relates to whatever you're trying to play.
What instrument do you play?
Try practicing with a metronome regularly. Use a DAW to record yourself during practice. Ideally, find a MIDI of a song you're trying to learn so you can see how the notes are subdivided (although this may be a bit hard if you're a complete newbie to music, since it assumes you know what the tempo/time signature is of the song and how to import it properly...), it really helps to have a good teacher that lets you learn things more practically rather than clapping like a mongoloid which won't teach you shit.
When I'm struggling to subdivide I practice with a metronome set to double the real tempo so it clicks half beats for me. Other than that you'll just learn what rhythms are meant to sound like over time. There are only a few patterns that come up again and again, and then the rest is just mixing and matching.