basic rudiments

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BASIC RUDIMENTS Tones, Semitones and Accidentals

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BASIC RUDIMENTS. Tones, Semitones and Accidentals. On the keyboard, a semitone is the distance from one key to the closest neighbour key. Accidentals are symbols which raise or lower the pitch of a note. These accidentals change the pitch by a semitone:. Flat. Sharp. Natural. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: BASIC RUDIMENTS

BASIC RUDIMENTSTones, Semitones and

Accidentals

Page 2: BASIC RUDIMENTS

On the keyboard, a semitone is the distance from one key to the closest neighbour key.

Accidentals are symbols which raise or lower the pitch of a note. These accidentals change the pitch by a semitone:

Sharp Flat Natural

Page 3: BASIC RUDIMENTS

A sharp raises a note one semitone.

EC D E F G B

C D F G A

A B

Page 4: BASIC RUDIMENTS

A flat lowers a note one semitone.

FD E F G A C

D E G A B

BC

Page 5: BASIC RUDIMENTS

A natural cancels a flat or sharp.

G A

A sharp note is lowered a semitone with a natural.A flat note is raised a semitone with a natural.

G

C D

D AC

Page 6: BASIC RUDIMENTS

On the staff, accidentals always go in front of the note they affect.

WRITE IT RIGHT!

The inside of the accidental symbol must be placed on the same line or space as the note.

Page 7: BASIC RUDIMENTS

The names of accidental notes are written with the symbol after the note name.

D G E CF C

Page 8: BASIC RUDIMENTS

NOTE THE RULE!

An accidental changes all the notes on the same staff line or space for an entire measure unless it is cancelled with another accidental.

F DF DF F F D

This F is in the same bar and on same staff space as the previous F sharp

This D is in the same bar but not on the

same staff line as the previous D flat.

The barline cancels the previous F sharp

from the previous bar

The natural cancels the previous D flat.

This F is in the same bar but not in the

same staff space as the previous F sharp.

Page 9: BASIC RUDIMENTS

A chromatic semitone uses notes with the same letter name.

A diatonic semitone uses notes with different letter names.

MEMORY HELP: “Diatonic” and “Different” begin with the same letters.

Chromatic SemitoneFF F G

Diatonic Semitone

Page 10: BASIC RUDIMENTS

To write a note a chromatic semitone above a given note:

Draw a note on the same line or space as the given note.

Add an accidental to make the note a semitone higher than the given note.

CC

Page 11: BASIC RUDIMENTS

To write a note a chromatic semitone below a given note:

Draw a note on the same line or space as the given note.

Add an accidental to make the note a semitone lower than the given note.

AA

Page 12: BASIC RUDIMENTS

To write a note a diatonic semitone above a given note:

Draw a note on the closest line or space above the given note.

Add an accidental to make the note a semitone higher than the given note.

C D

Page 13: BASIC RUDIMENTS

To write a note a diatonic semitone below a given note:

Draw a note on the closest line or space below the given note.

Add an accidental to make the note a semitone lower than the given note.

GA

Page 14: BASIC RUDIMENTS

A whole tone is the distance of two semitones.

F G C C DB

WRITE IT RIGHT!

Always use neighbour letter names to write whole tones.

1

2 1 2 1

2

Page 15: BASIC RUDIMENTS

GF

Enharmonic notes are notes at the same pitch with different names.

B C D E

Page 16: BASIC RUDIMENTS

The End