LearningTrebleClefG e Find the G five keys aboveMiddle C. This is called Theble Clef G.
Hll c
H o n dS h a p eE x e r r i s e o With R.H. fingers 1 and 5, play back and forth betweenMiddle C and Treble Clef G. (This is the interval of a 5th.) o Is TFebleClef G written on line I,2,3, 4, or 5? (circle) The treble clef is also called the G clef becauseit circles around the G line on the staff. The treble clef came from the old letter G shown below.
Melodvon C andG
Moderately
€>
ryf c and c
song,
Play this
song.(2-3 4)
C a n d G
T-]
I t l l - l
e
a, In
the
e
+
tre - ble
they
be - long.
1 p
+
e
€>
a
C\I
orscArRY Playthispiecehandstogether. 5 and1. L.H. playsinalower CPositionwithfingers (Theletternamesstaythe same,but the finger numberswill be different.) ^fl|.
ci
o F
Teacher Duet: (Studentplays as written)
€> 5
Aboutthe DamperPedal The damper pedal is the pedalon the right. It lifts thedampers(felts)off the strings which lets the soundcontinueto ring. Pedalmark:
Useyour right foot for the damper pedal. Keep your heel on the floor.
Pedal
hold it down
Pedal DOWN
UP
o Which R.H. finger now playsTfeble Clef G?
Fife andDrum With spirit
3on
?
fife
> and drum.
the
hills
they
O
o
>
Drum,
drum,
t " l
t1
March - ing
from
, f t O
come.
Play >
e
o a
E a,
drum!
€>
Play
p€,
a
Teacher Duet: (Student plays as written)
18
fife
and
t
O
drum!
€>
fife
and
O
?
LearningBassClefF o Find the F five keys below Middle C. This is called Bass CIef F.
sl il
r With L.H. fingers 1 and 5, play back and forth betweenMiddle C and Bass Clef F.
Canyou namethis interval?
E
F
H o n dS h o p eE x e r c i s e
(Seep. 17)
r Is Bass Clef F written on line 1,2, 3, 4, or 5? (circle)
c
The bassclef is also called the F clef becausethe dots point out the F line on the staff. The bass clef came from the old letter F shown below.
F-line- ry --7-
F i n g e rC h a l l e n g eP: l a yB a s sC l e fF with L.H. finger5, then4, then3. Which fingerplaysBassClef F rn My Invention?
Mv Invention
Like a machine lon
2
- Mv
n!f'
in - ven- tion
is worth men- tion,
if
you saw it
you would know.
)a a1
a,
e
+
e
It's fan - tas - tic
e
and bom- bas- tic
+
e
and what's more it
e - ven glows!
I a
II sclE tt With ahighlighterorpencil, tracethe bassclef F line forthe firstmeasure.Your teachermay have you trace tfr" $ G hne and)' F line for many pieces in the book. ^9, TeacherDuet: (Studentplaysas written)
t9
GuideNotes ffi ffi ffi
Middte C, Theble Clef G, and Bass Clef F ale the three notes you have learned.Thesenotes will ooguide"you as you learn new notes on the staff. o Name, then play thesenotes.
withD-B-F 2nds(Steps) Reading Learn the three notes that are between Guide Notes Middle C and TFeble CIef G. o Play and say: o Play and say:
e
E line
-
D
E
F
space
line
space
On the staff,the interval of a2nd (step)is from: a LINE to the next SPACE
r line
-
space
or
p. 14) a SPACEto the next LINE (See
space -
line
o
Look at the noteheadsand circle UP a 2nd or DOWN a2nd for each examplebelow.
a
Then play each on the piano.
DOWN a2nd
20
FFl
ScenicTrainRide
val - leys, riv - ers,
loCross ing
up the moun - tains, through the coun - try pass- ing for - ests, on the sce - nic
trav - 'ling
and
Miles
on
the
)t
-
a
J
t In
t the
r
+
val - levs.
J
up
J
e
u
the moun- tains, through the coun - try
r\,
side.
ntf a a
n v Explore playing a low D-A sth with your L.H. at the beginningof the first and last lines of music. Your teacherwill help you.
oI s
:dhr A
N
^
Teacher Duet: (Studentplays 1 octave higher)
o o
4
tl-ltsl|I:l t
?
.-'-\ r4
nlt--,'l-
e
l
o a)
tr
L'H',f
nW -pon rePg!!
? . 1
l--'/'
D.C. al Fine
J
? nurt.
2I
ReadingChangesin Direction Thetrick to reading2ndsis watchingfor a changein direction(upor down). Keep your eyesfocused on the noteheads.
The arrowsbelow showthe up, down, or repeatedmovementof the notes. Example: I
1. Play: ---dd;-
=-6-
"!f
up
o Draw arows to show the up, down, or repeated movement of the notes.
2, Play:
ol4rn
#ryffi
Learn and play this piece by: . reading 2nds up and down t recognizing note namesC-D-E-F-G
RomanTrumpets
Proudly
€> air, (2-3
4)
ton-? Son-? I
,
a
)
/ u
Ro
e
-
man
e
trum - pets
e
call - ing
in
the
€> square.(2 - 3
4)
e
a
22
FF
*fnF-tr ffi*"T" r7*r.
f*o
- man
n-p- r rE €
sound - ing
ev - 'ry
where.(2-3
€>
t* X
A'
t t Makeup a shortR.H. fingerexercisein C Position(C-D-E-F-G) that movesup anddownby 2nds.
TeacherDuet: (Studentplaysas written.Teacherpedalsfor duet.)
f -{
4)
LegatO meanssmooth and connected,with no break in the sound. To play legato, one finger goes down as the other finger comesup. A slur is a curved line over or under a group of notes. It meansto play legatoo Play this example.Listen for a smooth, connectedsound.
Repeatstartingon HIGHERC's.
R.H.
A monk singing this piece would take a breath at the end of each slur. As you play this piece, let the music "breathe" by lifting your wrist at the end of each slur. Your teacherwill show you how.
Chantof the Monk Rather slowly, flowing
lu
-
Al-
ia,
le-
lu-
ia.
e i a . ( 2 - 3 - 4 )
A
p
l
-
l
e
)a
c
t
t
A l -
e
-
l e -
l u -
a i a ,
A l -
l e -
l u
e ia.
(2-
3
4)
Name the notes of this piece aloud. TeacherDuet: Seebottomof page25.
24
FF
)rnn Lr''
) <'-i-1 'l-
-,.-ts' :L
\ft*
:r{
'^, :'tl
t F,
C Position
Playing Legato Hands Together
L.H.----1
[-
Now play Chant of the Monks hands together. Your L.H. will play the samemelody in a lower C Position.Watch for changesof direction.
f
R.H.----1
E
c
D E F G
c
D E F G
Notice the letter namesstay the same,but the finser numbersare different.
Chantof the Monks Rather slowly, flowing
-
lu'',.
A l - l e - l u - i a .
ia,
€> ia. (2-3
4)
A
l
-
l
lu
e
-
ia,
o A l - l e - l u - i a ,
A l - l e - l u
i a . ( 2 - 3 - 4 )
N
o r s cA 1ey Which four measuresmove down by 2nds? measures-, .0'
fiA
-E
moveup by 2nds'! measures Which two measures YrTr.
r
-,
and-
Which two measuresmove up and down by 2nds? measures
Teacher Duet: (Studentplays as written for page 24; I octave higher for page 25.)
trtr
-, and -
and
oo o F
]l v
*r4 ,L - LI'
l- {.r
z.
l--a.r{
LearningBassClefG Bassclef G is a spacenote. It is a 2nd (step)aboveBassClef F. (Remember, BassClef F is a GuideNote.) (BassClef F)
Planetarium
Spinning steadily
r F-----'l :' t \ t - . t - l
,
l
v
\\t,
=\
/-
,
r
--_
(J-,
e
(
e
J
\
mf
f a a
IiF
tr I
/
,l . .
o' t tlt /Bt
25
\
-f
-
t
J
-
'
€>
/
l
e
^
-
l
* t Nameandplay the 3 GuideNotesusedin this piece. Thennameeachnotein the piecealoud.
FF
3 - ' ?* t L 4 /;
'.. :;
\
l - i
I
Minuet Moderatelyslow
'ryf p on repeat
s on t,-,i-? RepeatfromE
r\,
7>\,, 6
ci
o I
Point out four accent marks in this plece. ci o
Teacher Duet: (Studentplays I octavehigher)
I c
E
O L
$ t " i \ ;\ : r " !
\
LearningB andA . Play B andA backandforth severaltimes. .UseL.H. fingersl-2, then2'3, then3-4.
space-line- space- line
o What is the interval between B and A?
B
A
r Name, then play the notes above.
RussianFolk Song TraditionalRussian lA
tr v -
ltl
a J
o
t
-
l
o
J J a
,_
/
\
t
+
J
'
O . '
a
tr ,
e a
.--
\
/
r
'
'
J
J
a).
O
Point out the echo in this piece. TeacherDuet: (StudentplaysI octavehigher)
trl-| I P-l,l 28
t:p t: fr: fon repeat
^ -t/
&
r
,lh
S o u n dC h e c k A : reyou observingthe accentmarks? ['ast,urgent
rl\" \ / v
,/:
'
-F
MidnishrRide
*r\
)
.#.
a
N .i
'' ;:;:,:" ffiT'Tl#[2i,, lHli:T*,,.ffiH.' H' fiilJn"lJiil t
t
t
o
r)
; o U
Teacher Duet: (Studentplays I octave higher)
c
E
r-_J *r-: ,1--
-T.
o tu
,C-
ruf' 29
(2\'
.
_I
:-
r:), '-"i'-ry J
' \
>"4+
'
Reading3rds(Skips)on the Staff
z,
On the staff, a 3rd (skiP) moves from:
a SPACEto the next SPACE
a LINE to the next LINE
o Play this 3rd with L.H. fingers 3-L. then 4-2. then 5-3.
Playthis 3rd with R.H. fintsers L-3.then2-4.then3-S.
/W E
With a strong beat
BusStopBoogie
3on
€z
frrru- n't hearmy
old
a-larmclock.
Got - ta rush out
to
the bus stop.
)t t\ t
4
e
a, There's the
bus now,
will
I
Hur - ry
make it?
a -
a
a
o I scllr n Y pslnl out the measureswith line-to-line 3rds. g
^1$,
3rds. with space-to-space Point out the measures
TeacherDuet: (StudentplaysI octavehigher) s 4 z. I
30
€>
t.
t-
;.
out
the
door!
-' -.
t; h'r
' . '*a\-+
.i
"'d;: qQ
si'
t,{.
<
- \''\
\
tl^
I n t e r v o l C h e c k : P u ta y ' a b o v e e a c h measurewith the interval of a 3rd. Cheerfully
ryru
Camptown Races StephenFoster (1826-1864, U.S.) arransed
ronD?
n- town la - dies
sing this song,
doo-dah, (3 - 4)
doo dah; (3 - 4)
ton Q ? t
Camp - town *
O
race - track ^
five miles long,
*
oh,
d a y .( 2 - 3 - 4 )
doo dah
,
a a
Going to
run
night.(2-3-4)
all
Going to
run
all
day.(2-s-4)
€>
', -t
t-
U
N
Bet
mf* o
my money on (the)
?
bob- tail
?
ilog,
some-body bet on (the)
ci
bay. ( 2 - 3 - 4)
t
o t F
I ci o
Teacher Duet: (Student plays I octave higher)
a C
E o L
l-, l'.1
i, 1,
.'\ lI
= l beatof slle/rcci;o Clap or tap the rhythmbelow,countingaloud,"1 - 2 - 3 - 4 ; ' , Hint: Count,but do not clap for the quarterrest.
4
l
4 d 1
J j j 'll
I
d -
2
3
-
2
4
3
4
Einelfleine l\achtmusik (A Little l\ight Music) WolfgangAmadeusMozart (1756-179t,Austria) arransed
With energy
C o u n t : l - 2 - 3 - 4
I - 2 - 3 - 4
I
2 - 3
4
tonG?
Teacher Duet: (Studentplays I octavehigher)
32
FF
n -1 I
a, 9' f -,.
,*
J
€>
J
a
A' XE|,
4 4
e
v I Makeup two measures of f rhythm andwrite it below.Includea quarterrest. Thenclap or tap your rhythm.
tl
tr
t-l /,
TheTie A tie is a curvedline connectingtwo noteson the sameline or space.It meansthe notewill be played once,but held for the lengthof both notescombined. = 8 beats
GyptyBand Lively
Count:l
3on-? ton -?
-
2
-
3
4
TeacherDuet: (StudentplaysI octavehigher)
q
I
:
i
i j F
\-\-___/,
34
FF120
a,
t-
g
r
o
(J
t-
J
w
l
o
u d
(J
e
f
r
a
a
J
'
O
\ a
a
a
-
a t
5
LowA (Seep. 15)
Identify each curved line in this piece as a slur or a tie.
FF1205
35
E .-
U
Eighth(Bth)l{otes
-
2 eighth notes= I quarter note ----^^tt t
o o
\,-,*
o'
t
run - ning
A single eighth note has aflag.
|
t
t
l
o
l
l
walk
Think of eighth (8th) notesas running notes. Two (or more) eighth notesare connectedby a beam.
Directions: Clap or tap theserhythms with your teacher. Two ways of counting are shown. Practice counting with each.
The RhythmFlag Feela steadybeat (pulse).
whole note count:"1-2-3-4"
half notes c o u n t : ' o -I 2 "
quarter notes count:"1"
eighth notes count: "I and" Notice that each beat is divided into two equal parts.
Clap the "Rhythm Flag" with the metronometicking at: ) : 72
36
J : 88 ):104.
FF120
ffi*,/'ffiFrenehMinuet
Rhyth m (heck: Are your eighthnotesflowing gently, with a steady,even rhythm?
Jean-PhilippeRameau (1683-1764,France) arransed
Flowing smoothly,rather slowly
Count:I
and
2
and
3
and
I
and
2
and
3
and, etc.
3
Circleall the 3rds in this piece.(Hint: Thereareeight.) Teacher Duet: (Studentplays I octave higher)
/r_)t
ThePhrase A phrase is a musical idea or thought. A phraseis often shown in the music with a slur, also called a phrase mark. Think of a phraseas a musical sentenceand each note in the phraseas a word. Rememberthat all of the notes under the phrasemark are to be played as though each note is a meanineful word in the musical sentence.
phrasemark
Morning a a
Point out eachphrasein this piece. How many measuresare in each phrase?
(from Peer Gynt Suite) Edvard Grieg (1843-1907,Norway) arransed
Gently moving tt
<)
Ist Phrase
mp
?
t a
( I 2 a n d 3 a n d )
l
a
-
-
3
lon ?
f.
Teacher Duet: (Student plays 1 octave higher)
( { F
38
FF120
rnf a'
2nd phrase
)a /al
-\
<"/
nW rra Pn:se
o a
' t . t-
I
t
+
.r,
7
t
I tie within a slur
t a
DI scAE RY Can you play the melody in measures9-16 with your R.H. beginningon D? Hint: Readby 2nds and 3rds. ^A
-
jr
Pick-upNotes(or llpbeats) Thispiecebeginson beat4 withpick-upnotes. Pick-upnote(s)leadintothefirst full measure. If a piece begins with a pick-up, the last measureis often incomplete. The combined beats of the incomplete first and last measureswill equal one full measure.
t , t Oh! Susanna StephenC. Foster (1826-1864, U.S.) arranged
With energy
come from Al - a
c
t l going to Lou' - si
J
an-a )
)
bam-a with mv
a
my_
true love for -
t
a
to
see.
\
It-
a
a I
TeacherDuet: (StudentplaysI octavehigher)
.t-U---/
40
FF12
A
I
L \
, -
e
r
/
-
r
t
rained all night the
day
I
)
left,
the
)
weath- er )
it
;>
The-
\dry;
)
\.
a a
-. t
/-l
,-
a
r
sun
"
so
hot
I
froze
to death, Su
)
)
don't You
crv
)
ta
san - na
don't you
cry.
a a
Oh!
san - na,
Su
Oh,
for
/-l
\\t,
A
,/
,
/
J
come from -
I Is 1s
J
J
Al - a
bam-a )
with my
ban - jo )
-
r RY How many phrases are inthis piece? Point out the phrasethat begins differently than the others.
r
d '
on
my
knee.
\'t-2-3"
tlv -,
NewGuideNote:BassC Numberthe bassclef spacesl-2'3'4 in the bassstaffshown. (Spacesarenumberedfrom bottomto top. Seep. 14.) This is your new GuideNote. Which spaceis BassC? -
Middte C
Practiceleapingftom Middle C to BassC with L.H. fingers1 and5. This distanceis the intervalof an octave(8 notes).
BassC (New Guide Note)
Guide Note Review o On the staff above,drawwholenotes on Tleble Clef G andBassClef F. o Thenplay thesefour GuideNoteson the piano.
JumpShots (for L.H. alone)
Bouncy
a'
nrf O
t
?
l
?
3
^
a
a
a
(,
r
lon 7 T;t \ l t ' l
)t tl
t
-.r*r t
,
t
e
?
t
?
O
a
r
d
r
o s F
Find andplay otheroctaveson the keyboardwith your L.H. (Usefingers5 and 1.)
42
FF120
Reading in BassC Position Learnthesenotesthat stepup from GuideNote BassC. (Youalreadyknowthe circlednotes.)
BassC
D
space
E
Locomotive Rhvthms
F
l i n e - s p a c e - l i n e
(for L.H. only)
First clap or tap, counting aloud. Count: walk Count: 1
walk (and)
walk (and)
2
3
walk (and)
(and)
4
etc.
"!f run - ning run - rung run - mng and 2 and 3 and 4 and
run - ning 1
etc.
l a a
walk run - mng 1 (and) 2 and
walk run - mng 3 (and) 4 and
etc. -
run - nmg 1
and
run - nmg 2
fun - nmg
and
3
and
run - mng 4
and
etc.
l a
;
Rlrythmshandstogether.The R.H. playstn a higherC Position. PIayLocomotive Teacher Duet: (Student plays I octave higher)
a@
F1205
tr tr repeat!
o C) 5
-..'
",,'0\vlC'f
-') 'j,
l,l
'" ir" :'' v t'
"'
-0(
4'"J A theme (melody) often has severalmusical phrases.
Odeto Joy (Themefromthe9th SYmPhonY*)
r Howmanyphrases theme arein thisfamous (measures1-16) by Beethoven?
C Position Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-4827,GermanY) arranged
Joyfully
mf a
' t .
I
^
'
-
sonL? t - l ta
-T
AJ -i=--r ^
a
-
tr S\,
,!f
--i=--
r
a
-
t
.
-
-
* A symphonyis a large-scalework for orchestra.It is a mark of Beethoven's genius that he wrote this masterpieceafter he had gone deaf.
44
FFl20
ta tt
u l
.
".,
-----------
v
-
-
a t
|.t
t t
..t
o
e
-
+
-
t
r
-
7
-
a
)
Whereis the openingleft-handphraseplayedby the right hand? measure
45
sound. Staccato meansa crisp,detached quicklybringthefingeroff thekey. Toplaystaccato, The staccatomark is a small dot placed above or below the note. []a*i,t"
B=3 ,/) " t--!\.
r1
4' ) e $
\
.) a. n "r...
. l ao'q
z-.&
lygil
R.H. Warm-up nounc-ing gent -
mf-P on repeat
L.H. Warm-up Bounc- ing
W-p
gent - ly,
bounc- ing
gent - ly,
bounc- ing down
on repeat
Theme from the
S l a r c o t o C h e c k :I s y o u rw r i s lt o o s e andrelaxedas you play staccato?
"Surprise"Sy*phony FranzJosephHaydn (1732-1809, Austria) arransed
Lightly lon
son9 ?
A circled finser number alerts you to a changeof hand position.
c
!
: J
Make up a short o'raindrop"melody in C Position. Play high on the keyboard with all notes staccato.
46
FF120
This pieceusesbothlegatoandstaccatotouches. Hint: Play the thumbon the sidetip. \ ")o-!'l-,qrt't\ '
HungarianDance
F'E'r'rlil' * t, ,,.i, "urr't
JohannesBrahms (1833-1897,Germany)
*'
Quickty spirited
,
a,
t. \ >
\
\
\\l
a
a
r
a
+ -
Teacher Duet: (Student plays I octave higher)
a
LearnittgTreble ClefA Tfeble Clef A is a spacenote. It is a 2nd above Treble Clef G. (Remember,Treble Clef G is a Guide Note.) .. a\ c,r- r {i
.\
)")(-o
Ldr "/
./
Irish
-Q
.-. { !i
Washerwoman
Hint: Watch for the changein hand position at measures6 and9. .
Traditional arranged
Briskly
lon -? r
/'_\
change to I
-uT
\
o
e
f
+
e: ( 1)
d o U c
e
o
o
TeacherDuet: (Studentplaysas written)
trtrtr 48
lto! E 5 ttmes 4
FF120
v"/ To helpyou with the R.H. positionchanges, play Ihe first R.H. note in eachmeasure. (Noticethe R.H. beginsin thebassclef.) Yourteacherwill demonstrate.
Waltz Fr6d6ricChopin (1810-1849, Poland) arransed
tr) (f)
o-
Teacher Duet: (Studentplays 2 octaves higher)
C) <
4
49
7
FACBtheSpaces
z.
The spacenoteson the treblestaff spellthe word F A C E. (Youhavealreadylearnedthe trebleF andA spacenotes.)
ll iltl tl EI E
E
c
F
A
c
E
G Line
SpaceNote Drill: l. Startingwith the F aboveMiddle C, play andsay the treblespace notesF-A-C-E,goingup andgoingdown.UseR.H. frnget2. 2. At" you playingsecondsor thirds? (circle)
Before playing, name each note in the blank. Dreamily lon
L.H. over
Dreamscape L.H. over
2
otfpLL
(prepareL.H.)
With damperpedal down, createyour own
50
o'Dreamscape"using treble F - A - C - E. FFl
HalftimeShow Moderatelv fast "
ton,
Up the field they Down the field they
march- ing march - ing
band band
play - ing for the
at the foot - ball
at at
half - time. half time.
I
Hav - ing What a O }
fun show
so much mu- sic
> #
v
game. game!
-e
a a
The LonelyPine
Very slow and lonely
p kcho softly)
move@ ," : l=--
-
,!f , t a
-
-
-
p J
e'
\a'
R e s t ( h e c k : I d e n t i f ye a c h rest for measures9-12.
W @e
Zipping along lon
Rallv Racecar
2
J^4 l
z
l
race
Check- ered flags wave
All
of
the
be
driv
Teacher Duet: (Student plays 1 octave higher)
T I 3 I
52
r
FF1
round and
a- round
Who's gon - na
win
"Four" just came 'round
f
,u" - ing
"Ten" takes the
lead
past the
1 3
olscAIRYwhatisooracecar',spe11edbackwards?-Puttheracecatinreverseby ^6
playing the piece backwards,from measure24 to measure2l. This is called retrograde.
f{ewGuidef{ote:TrehleC o Numberthe treble clef spacesl-2-3-4 in the treblestaffshown. This is your new GuideNote. Which spaceis TrebleC? r Practiceleapingfrom Middle C to TrebleC with R.H. fingers 1 and5. What is the nameof this interval?
T I T T T
Guide Note Review "Guide notes" are your "anchors" as you learn new notes on the staff. You can name any note on the staff by stepping up or down from Guide Notes.
c F- c . ffi
Bouncing steadily
ols
^A,
54
Playup a 2nd from BassF.
"c
o Name, then play theseGuide Notes.
Guidef{ote Pinball
Play downa 2nd from T[eble G. Play downa 3rd from BassC.
Play the lowest F on the keyboard.
FF12
in TrebleC Position Reading Learnthesenotesthatstepup from GuideNote Tfeble C. (Youalreadyknow the circlednotes.)
. Play and say: Tleble C space
D line
E -
space -
F line
G -
space
'"1',;:,:l;i::ffi 1101.,31,8;g?%tnslish..T# .tecognIZingnotenameSTreb1eC-D-E-F-G,wG756_|80g,England) transposedto C major
Stately lon
Teacher Duet: (Studentplays I octave higher) 3
_
R.H. J
----\
_
J J J
2
,t
.
'l t
- r ' +t
4
a
sl e
\ ; o C)
L'H'
205
'Lrt-Mnm
1 vonont'
2
t'
s
55
Bagpipes Lively
C Position
lon _ 5on
)a t\
c
'
l
a
- t .
I
rprepare) 0 !,,-
- -' ,
Whichtwo phrasesbeginwith 3rds? Whichtwo phrasesbeginwith 2nds?
56
FF1
Imitation Notice that eachphrasefor the L.H. is "copied" by the R.H. This is called imitation.
Tho-HandConversation ron
Moderately
Nome the position.
2
(prepareR.H.)
(PrePare R.H.) f
a
a
t
a' ,-*
p
,J
fi, }{l
S
(prepareR.H.)
u , Makeup a one-measure melodywith yourL.H. in CPosition. Imitatethemelodywith yourR.H.oneoctavehigher.[ry severalof these. \ l
Finding Imitation o Whichhandimitatesrn measures l-4? R.H.or L.H. (circle)
Whenthe Saints GoMarchingIn
o Whichhandimitatesin measures 17-20? R.H. or L.H. (circle)
Nome the position. Traditional
of
go march- ing
on, when the
€> in.
Oh, when the
aJ --/ in)
(go march- ing
J
Oh,
how
I
want
to
be
in
that
\\___--
num - ber, (yes,
a I
(prepareR.H.)
-J do) /
-o , when
the
Teacher Duet: (Student plays I octave higher)
58
I
olfon. whenthe
t -
a t
\ J
,
)
-
-
)
I
a,
Oh, when the
saints
go
march - ing
in.
(go march- ing
a a
in)
do)
Oh,
how
I
num - beq (yes,
when the
Write the countsin the musicfor the first andIastincompletemeasures.
I
MoreAboutIntervals at thekeyboard. Intervalsareeasyto measure Countthenumberof whitekeys(letternames)including thefirst and last. This is the number (size) of the interval' You have alreadv learnedthe intervals of a 2nd and a 3rd.
3rd
L 2 3
L 2 =2nd t
l
A 5th spans5 letternames.
A 4t}fl spans4letter names.
j
I c I
c
F
Z 3 4 =
t
L 2
th
3 4 5 = s t h
l
4ths moveup or downfrom:
5ths moveup or downfrom: a line to a line or a spaceto a sPace Think:skip+askip
a line to a spaceor a spaceto a line Think:skip+astep o Play:
o Play:
Lsth upl
What other interval have you learnedthat moves from a line to space or a space to line?
Lsthdowil
What other interval have you learnedthat moves from a line to line or a space to space?
A 4th soundstike the opening of "Here Comes the Bride." A 5th soundslike the opening of "Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star." Your teacherwill play some 4ths and 5ths. Listen and practice identifying each.
60
thentogether.) (TeacherNote: Play the notesseparately,
FFl
Focuson Fourths(4ths) To draw an interval, count the starting note and each line and space. r Draw a 4th abovetheseline notes.
o Draw a 4th abovethese spacenotes.
Ex. Think: line skip-a-lineto a space (skip + a step)
Think: spaceskip-a-space to a line (skip + a step)
Play the 4ths above with fingers 1 and 4, then with fingers 2 and 5. Listen to the sound of the 4th.
Promenade (from Pictures at an Exhibition) ModestMussorgsky (1839-1881, Russia) arranged
Slow march
\ \ ci o o F
5
c{ ci {J
Circle all the 4ths. There are 8. Hint: Don't overlook the L.H. to R.H. intervals.
o c E
o
Teacher Duet: (Studentplays 1 octave higher)
ul4 I
o L
o Which R.H. finger is not played in this piece?
Dragon Chinese
Moderately
C Position
(move down quickly)
)a
-\
e l>
aJ 9'
f -
aa
T
o
J
-
-a
+'
n!l' -
a
c.R .MAr
62
u r Createyour own melodyfor measures5-B and 13-16. Play only notesC-D-F-G andusethe rhythmgiven. FF
NohaOe QueenLiliuokalani arranged
Moderately
3on 2
1@edaloptional)
1 -
e
J
Q), charm - ing t
a
one
who
lives
a-mong
the
ers.
flow
One ---
-
-
a J
I
tr )a
I
,-
a .,.
r
e
fond
em
e' brace
e
e o"/
fore
/
I
J
leave,
un
a
I /a\
,/
e
a, til n
we
+'
€>r
meet
gain.
a
p -
a I
f
ra
I
I
c{
; o
Teacher Duet: (Studentplays as written) 5 3 I
J
3 I
c
tr:-l
E
I
o
tl
o tu
Focuson Fifths(Sths) r Drawa 5th abovetheseline notes.
Think: line skiP-a-line to a line (skiP + a skiP)
r Draw a 5th abovethesespacenotes.
to a space Think: spaceskip-a-space (skip + a skiP)
Play the 5ths above. Listen to the open sound of the 5th.
TheKing of Hearts
Quickly
11. t
a
r
c
/
/
/
'
1
o
v
J
I
a
- t a /
€>
J
-
l
Name two intervals that move line-to-line or space-to-space.
Teacher Duet: (Student plays 1 octave higher)
3'l
2't
i'r
t
17.
54
r ,r
a1 -
No MoonTonight
Smoothly moving lon
-?
No
no
moon
moon
kt
to
fills
/al
the
dark
eve - ning
sky,
-
a)
I
no
moon
to
I
nisht.
P;"-
\-
a
-
ta
Teacher Duet: (Studentplays 1 octave higher)
3--)\r
N
Llt 3=-
fr-}-,
)il lJJ | )il lJJl l).J.i) L.H.pp
tr
--_
_
=--.-\_
1 ) J J t rD I ) JJ]
{
ci o o s
ilIusicalForm The overallstructureof a pieceis calledmusicalform. This piecehasthreesections:sectionA, sectionB, and the returnof sectionA. It is in A B A form. c Find andlabelthesethreesectionsin the music. Hint: The B sectionts dffirent ftom the A section andgivesvarietyto the Piece.
ForestDrums Noticethe differenthandposition. Moving quickly
Optional Drum Part:
nlf
The for - est
I
hear its
ton-? Son-?
rust - ling leaves, the
*A rubber bucket or large metal canister may also be used as a drum.
66
FF
(1 - 2-s-4
r - 2-3-4)
oE* - gs
rhy - thm
g*f
rhy- thm
-
-
a,
u
I'm
not
a
-
lone.
nyf fne sound of ^"'-
o I
', /a\
a,
1'
lead me - n f
home.
(r-2-3-4)
ry.
a
Name each type of rest in the drum part for measurel-B.
p
for - est drums will
t0 =
TheSharpil
I tl Ill
n half step is fromone key to the verY closestkeY.
. Play thesehalf stepson the piano. o Find andplay severalmorehalf steps.
n Shafp meansto play the keY that is a half step HIGHER.
Iil I
c
il E D
E E# (F)
!l
B
Ill
B#
(c)
Notice that
Notice that
E # :F
Bf: C
o Play thesekeyson the keyboardwhile namingthemaloud. r Yourteacherwill call out the namesof sharp keys. Find andplay eachon the keYboard.
GuideNoteReview o Name, then play thesesharped Guide Notes. Notice the sharp is written in front of the note and is on the sameline or space.
o Name, then play theseGuide Notes.
ffi
W W W W
)
C# o r scl,
-1fr -' 68
*, With L.H. finger 2, play from Bass C to Middle C moving UP by half steps.
aloud. Saythekeynames ( c - c # - D- D # - E- F -F # -c - c f - A - A # - B- c )
FI
P.p Rally First play handsalone. With pep
C Position .')
E--.
r)
o c) ts
t A' Lgl
t t Explorethe rangeof the keyboard.Play the R.H. of PepRattyin a HIGHER C Positionthanwritten,while the L.H. playsin a LOWER C Position.
The word dynamiCs comes from the Greek word for "power." In music, dynamics mean the "louds and softs" of the sound. andf *" dynamic marks you have learned.
P, fltiP, mf
crescendo(cresc.) (pronouncedkreh-SHEN-doh)
play gradually louder
diminuendo (dim.) (pronounceddi-min-u-EN-doh)
play gradually softer
This symbol is also called decrescendo(day-V'reh-SHEN-doh).
A sharp carries through an entire measure, but not past a bar line. (Seemeasure3.)
GoDownMoses
In a new measure,the sharp must be written agait.
Spiritual arranged
Slowly, soulfully .t
i\
-4
+
J Is
When
-
rael
E
in
was
gypt's
land,
ryf-
p a
-
-
pressed
Let
so
hard
they
f
Teacher Duet: (Student plays / octave higher)
trtr I
stpp I
70
__l_ *ff,
t
A
A
A
, l ' r fi e_li , f
'!:*-l A
I
FF
.t .f\
a,
could
not
c>
q
e
J
stand.
Let
pep_lJple
my
go.
-
c J F
m -at, f - -
Go
nW
down,
cresc.
-
o
'way
down
E -
in
gypt's
land.
)a tl
T
a, 9r rell
a\ \old
nlf \-.
v-
Pha - raoh,
p
\
\
-
t.
J .
Let
i
J
a. T
peo - ple
my
l
l
go.
--
-
-
l
l
e'
-
1
1
'' ";::xffi:tff,:1,'##;. X[' illiffi:'trxl:ff#J a - t
tr
4 a -
--
TheFlat b
Noticethat Fb:E
Noticethat Cb=B
II ! ! I
n flat meansto playthekey thatis a half stepLOWER.
1
I
D tFb F
Itel o o
G I A
cb c
ll
(e)
Play thesekeyson the keyboardwhile namingthemaloud. Your teacherwill call out the namesof flat keys. Find andplay eachon the keYboard.
A flat carriesthroughan entire but not pasta bar line. measure, In a new measure,the flat mustbe written agun. still Eb
+ ZamGali Gali
With energy t o n- ?
f
(stillflat)
ga
,t
ga - li,
li,
Israeli Folk Song arranged
ga - li.
lon -? Son-?
TeacherDuet: (StudentplaysI octavehigher)
' I . r l |
72
5 l
I
FF
|-;I t \ l
t " l
-
a
r
e
Zum .
f
J
e
t
ga - li,
e
J
ga - li,
ga - li.
e
+
ga - li,
Zum
e ga
-
li.
)
a
J
-
E )a t-
tj\
a
r
e
*Zum J . t
f
,
e
u
ga - li,
e
u
ga - li,
ga - li.
Ztm
e
e
ga - li,
+ ga
-
li.
l
Zum
ga -
li,
ga -
li,
ga -
li.
Choose any 4 black keys. Tell your teacherthe flat name and sharp name of each.
73
o Play:
Sometimesa natural is written as a reminder to play a white key in a new measure.(Seemeasure4.)
SugarfootRug
Happily
TeacherDuet: (StudentplaysI octavehigher) r r l
R.H.
74
a4: tva
F]
/al
):
/
/
e
}
I
J
t
J
\
p
I
I
-'}.
a
. ,.
f
r
.
ta\
v-
d
-,.
I
'
2 : e
a
|
2
cross@over
the thumb
.t -l
a r 7 7
7 ,---\
7
\
r
f
j
A l . I
t
4
What intervalis playedby the R.H. in the last measure?
'n + J
W)qJ
e
I
I
t
l z,
-
The word Scalecomes from the LaUnword scala, meaning "laddef." The notesof a scalemove up or down by 2nds (steps)' Pentameans"five." A pentascaleis a 5-note scale.
C Pentascale
scalestep: L
f-p
,{4
1.,
Tonic and Dominant
\u"tc
C Pentascale
andotherscalesyou will learn: In the C pentascale . the lst scalestepis calledthe tonic o the 5th scalestepis calledthe dominant A piece will usually end on the tonic. o Does Two-NoteFlight end on the tonic?
Scalestep: I tonic
Tito-NoteFlight C Position
crossR.H. over
76
rit. = ritardando This meansa gradualslowingof the music. Ritardandois often shortenedto ritard. or rit.
Journeyby Camel C Position
Moderately
sr) cL
o
@ N
ci q) I
Put a check y' abovethe measuresthat use onlv tonic and dominant notes. c
o
TeacherDuet: (Studentplaysas written)
tr tr En81
D.C. al Fine 5
The C Chord Threeor moretonesplayedtogetherform a chord. The C chordis madeof 3 tones that build up in 3rds from C. r C is the root
o E is the 3rd
o G is the 5th
R.H. nlfxoot-3rd - 5th,
root-3rd-5th,
- 5th, nyPRoot-3rd
root-3rd-5th,
Play the
"1ur
5th - 3rd-root.
C chord,
,1. C chord, 5th - 3rd-root.
L.H.
@'
.O 'O
Smooth and steady llayed together
t ) ,
f1
.
ChordLrossmgs / i \
8roR.H.[il a).
over L.H.I3-)crosses
and The studentmay beginAchievementSkill SheetNo. I Major S-fingerPatterns(Pentascales) Cross-HandArpeggios(AS5001).
78
FI
REVIEW: C is the tonic note in C Position(keyof C). NEW: The C chordis the tonic chord in C Position because it is built on the tonicnote. It is commonlycalledthe I chord. (I is theRomannumeralfor the number"1".)
rytonicnote
Row,Row,Row YourBoat
C Position:I
o Beforeplayingthis piece,write the RomannumeralI undereachmeasurewith a blockedor brokenC chord.
C Position Traditional arranged
Lively
1l 3'
rilr!
r____J I t
down
the
I
Mer-ri
ntf
- ly,
R.H. mer-ri - ly,
ttt ' J 5
Play Row, Row, Row YourBoat as a round with your teacher.The teacherplays 2 octaveshigher than written and begins after the studentplays 4 measures. Student and teacherplay two times. )5
79
F o r mC h e t k : The form of this pieceis A A B A. o Label the sectionsin Yourmusic. Hint: Noticethe repeatof sectionA.
I've GotMusic Nome the position.
Moderatebeat
I I
I to
tell my love to
don't have sway and
trtr e
+
AJ
but I've Yes, I've
got got
mu mu
a t a
TeacherDuet: (Studentplays1 octavehigher) R.H.
L.H. ? fry l' I l, l; stnU?
80
-
sic sic
,
down down
u
J
in in
r
my my
_
soul.soul.-
4e
z
E a
r
\ play
I
mp
e -
mu
t
t
-
ev - ery
slc
-
e
sin - gle night,
a
@
a
r
{
(J
J
'cause my
kev -aa
feel
makes me
board
all
right.
D
4
tr --_
a, g J
My
e bod - y's
sway - in',
e ---.--__
vv
e
the blues I'm
play -
in'.
Z.l.
@ aJ
e=..-_-.--.-I've
a
got
that
e mu a.t
-
stc
-<> dowl
in
my
f'*
soul! \-> a.t
a ..D
|
''
H'
2
,3
the LHprav i#ffil'::::{?does fi:ff"::x;L'T
I
TheV7Chordin C Position (pronounced"five-seven")
V is theRomannumeralfor thenumber5. The V7 chord is a 4-note chord built up in 3rds from the dominant.
7th 5th 3rd
@ @ @ @
The 5th is omitted.
are often rearrangedto form a 3-note chord.
dominant
V7 for Left Hand o Firstplav a 5th in C Position.
r Firstplay a 5th in C Position.
. trtou. finger5 a half steplower (B). (This expandsthe intervalto a 6th.)
o Movefinger 1 a half steplower (B). (This expandsthe intervalto a 6th.) o Add finger 4 (step4) from the C pentascale.
Melody and Harmony The melody is the tune. Harmony refers to the notes or chords played with the melody.
HarmonYSounds (blockedchords)
o Practicethis I and V7 harmony wafin-up. 5
C Position
4
(r)
)
or sc& 1xy Playa C pentascaleup anddowns-l-o-w-l-ywith your R.H. Harmoniz e eachnoteby playinga I or V7 chordwith your L.H. ffi Listenandlet your earsguideyou.
82
FFI2
Princeof Denmarlc's March (A TrumpetYoluntarv) C Position
JeremiahClarke (1673-L707, England) arranged
Dignifiedmarch
,l
U
\ ' J ,
> --a
t
a
t 'rof,
' by writingI or v7 beloweachchord. harmony 6nuryr"rhe
TeacherDuet: (StudentplaysI octavehigher) 3
L.H.e ^r f9
wttn peaaL
Pl s>
(J
')
Grace Lmazing
Warm-up: Practicethe 3-5. L.H. alonefor measures
Wordsby JohnNewton EarlyAmericanmelody arranged
Gently moving
-
maz
\
d
\
grace,
mg
how
.
e
e sweet
the
sound
that
saved
e a-
a
(extendthumb) @
wretch
like
A \y I
Teacher Duet: (Student plays I octave higher)
(teacher pedals)
4
FF120
tl ,
v
v
e
U once
lost,
was--
but -
a a
now
am_
was
;
blind
but-
ttl
a,
t-
now
I
see.
L.H.@over
rit.
p J
Where doesthe R.H. play a broken chord? measure
IA a
a
It
z.
4
in ThreeG Positions Reading The5 notesof G PositionareG A B C D. Find these3 G Positionson the piano. r-
L.H.---r
L.H.-r
r-
R.H.---r
r-
l
cref lrheb8 I
G Pentascales tion and G pentascaleexercisebelow.
Low G -
I
I
r-Y-t a
t.
l
tl
) -
f
-
-
)
v
l
l
t
I chord inG
5on 2
BassClef G Position -
f 24 a
5
G
A
B
Tfeble Clef G Position
5on 2
-h
\ g
l{ewCuidef{ote:LowG BassClef Low G is easyto recognize. It is writtenon the bottom line of thebassclef staff.
Guide Note Review , Name, then play theseGuide Notes:
t_,J
I
n n n T
o Plav and sav: Low G
o Name the intervals in the blanks below.
IntervalStudvin G
Steady,legato
v
l )
-----.
nyf'
,A
^ ,
l
/\
/\
I
a
S o n- ? T;I r"l
lon
?
t tl
,
v
a
r
l
-----
I
a
(prepareL.H.)
tr , -l
o.
,
a)
ci
rit. t
t
?
?
a
50n 2
t',:,#':t Name the interval from the dominant down to the tonic. Name the interval from the dominant up to the tonic.
t
e
e
q)
a t
I F
Musette A musetteis a lively piece imitatingthe soundof a bagPiPe'
G Position Johann SebastianBach (1685-1750, GermanY) arranged
(createon the spot)a duetwith your teacherin G Position. c n rA r v r Improvise o Your teacherwill play only L.H. tonic anddominant notesasin measuresI and 2. {Fil ln' o You qeateaR.H. melodyaboveusingthe notesof G Position.
88
FFli
Review:The naturalcancelsaflat or sharp. The B-flat to B-natural in this piecegivesa "bluesy"sound. A
r\
o Play:
Hard-Drivin'Blues Son-? 3on-? ton -? -
Driving beat
G Position
trpattern---1
L
lon _ 5on_ t
\ J
f
-
AJ a
-
''Xf '
f
-
-
piece? brues this T;LT$"t9tr*T"T" i:::ff"'in
J
-
TheV7Chordin G Position
Teacher Note: The student should move the hand "in" (toward the fallboard) to easily play the black key.
tempO
-
meansthe speedof the music
o First practiceat a s-l-o-w tempo. Listen for steadyrhythm and crisp staccatos.
K63cc&
ewee
Toccatina*
o Gradually work up to a fast tempo.
Nqme the position.
4 eighth notes divided between the hands
)
tZ\
a
-)
I
ai .
a
I
* A toccatina is a short, flashy piece played at a fast tempo. (The toccatina is related Io the toccata, which is a large piece of the samecharacter).
90
FFl
Play a G pentascaleup and down s-l-o-w-l-y with your R.H. Harmonizeeachnote by playing a I or V7 chord with your L.H. Listen and let your ears guide you. q1
Hint: Practicethesetwo "tricky spots belowplayinghandstogether. 4-5. at measures r 3rd fingercross-over o R.H. finger changeat measure9.
Dance* Polovtsian (No.L7) AlexanderBorodin (1833-1887, Russia) arransed
Rather slow tempo change to
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* Polovtsian- pronouncedPol-o-VETZ-ian.
TeacherDuet: (Studentplays1 octavehigher)
F= L.H.
92
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p-ry) on repeqt
FF1:
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XIE ^Ar
* t Point out the following in this piece: phrase, tie, I chord, V7 chord^, cresc., dim., octave
TERMS OFMUSICAT DICTIONARY MARKS DYNAMIC p
m,p
mf
piano soft
mezzopiano moderately soft
mezzoforte moderatelyloud
f forte loud
(decresc') diminuendo(dim.) or decrescendo Play graduallYsofter.
crescendo (cresc.) Play gradually louder.
.---
---
SIGN
I
a
l-
t
o
I
J
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-6'f, 9---'--t--
TERM
DEFINITION
accentmark bar line bassclef
Play this notelouder.(SeeP. 5)
__-__|_-
blocked chord
=-r1-f ----l--'--
broken chord
-n:--]-;r
F t-
C pentascale chord I ("one") chord V7 ("five-seven") damper pedal dominant )
dotted half note
tl
double bar line dynamics
J-l
fermata
A -----tE.
E
eighth notes -----1
fifth (sth) form fourth (4th) G pentascale grand staff Guide Notes
,
l
half note l
-
l i l I fl l I 94
l'ljiLlj]-]
(Seep. 78) The notesof a chordplayedseparately. Five notessteppingup from C: C-D-E-F-G. C is thetonic.G is the dominant.(Seep.76) Threeor morenotessoundingtogether.(Seep. 78) Threenotesbuilt up in 3rdsfrom the tonic note.(Seep. 78) A four-notechordbuilt up in 3rdsfrom the dominantnote(step5 of the scale),oftenplayedwith only threenotes.(Seepp. 82,90) The right pedal,which sustainsthe sound.(Seep. 18) The fifth noteof the scale.(Seep. 76) Threecountsor beats.(SeeP. 27) A thin,thenthickbar line indicatingtheendof a piece.(Seep. 11) The "louds andsofts"of music.Seedynamicmarksabove.(Seep. 70) Two eighthnotesequalonequarternote.(Seep. 36) Bookp.32) Hold this notelonger.(SeePerformance
1st and 2nd endings Playthe lst endingandtakethe repeat,thentakethe Zndending,skipping overthe lst ending.(Seep. 64) flat
I d
(Seep. 11) A line whichdividesthemusicinto measures. The bassclef is usedto showlower notesandis usuallyon the bottom staff.It is alsocalledthe F clef becausethe two dotspoint out the F line. (Seepp. 14, 19) (Seep. 78) The notesofa chordplayedtogether.
half rest
A flat lowersa noteonehalf step.(Seep.72) The intervalof a 5th spansfive letternames.(Ex. C up to G, or A downto D) (Seep. 60' 64) or space-(skip-a-space)-space. Line-(skip-a-line)-line, The overallstructureof a piece.(Seepp' 66, 80) The intervalof a 4thspansfour letternames.(Ex. C up to fl or A downto E) (Seep' 60,6 1) or space-(skip-a-space)-line. Line-(skip-a-line)-space, Five notessteppingup from G: G-A-B-C-D. G is thetonic.D is thedominant.(Seepp. 86, 87) TWostavesconnectedby a bar andbrace,usedfor keyboardmusic' (Seep. 14) A setof memorizednotesusedto build readingskill. All notesof the Grand Staffmay be foundby readingup or downfrom GuideNotes'(Seep. 87) Two countsor beats(one-halfthe valueof a wholenote).(Seepp. 10,36) Two countsof silence.(Sitson line 3 of the staff.)(Seep. 52)
half step
The distancefrom onekey to the very closestkey on thekeyboard' (Ex.D-Ebor E-F) (Seep. 68)
harmony
Notesor chordsplayedwith the melody.(Seep. 82)
FF]
SIGN
TERM
DEFINITION
imitation
The immediaterepetitionof a musicalideaplayedby the otherhand. (Seepp. 57,58)
interval
The distancebetweentwo musicaltonesor keyson the keyboard. (Ex. 2nd,3rd, 4th,5th) (Seepp.8, 42, 60,6I, 64)
legato
Smooth,connected. (Seep. 24)
measure melody
Music is dividedinto groupsof beatscalledmeasures. Eachmeasurehas an equalnumberofbeats.(Seep. 11) The tune.(Seepp. 44, 82)
minuet
A statelydancein ?time.(Seep. 27)
musette
A lively pieceimitatingthe soundof a bagpipe.(Seep. 88)
I
natural
A naturalcancelsa sharpor a flat (alwaysa white key). (Seepp.74, g9)
|
octave
Theintervalwhichspans8 letternames.(Ex. C to C) (Seep.42)
Bro
ottava
Play oneoctavehigher(or lower) thanwritten.(Seep. 56)
pedal mark
Showsthe down-upmotionof the damperpedal.(Seep. 18)
phrase
A musicalsentence. A phraseis oftenshownby a slur,alsocalleda phrasemark.(Seep. 38)
h
:F -
!
e
pick'up note, upbeat The note(s)of an incompleteopeningmeasure.(Seep. 40) pitch
The highnessor lownessof a tone (sound).(Seep. 7)
promenade
A march of the guestsat the opening of an important event. (Seep. 61)
a
I
quarter note
One count or beat. (One-quarterthe value of a whole note.) (Seepp. 10, 36)
)t
quarter rest
One beat of silence.(Seep. 32)
repeatednote
A note on the sameline or spaceas the preceding note. (Seep. 16)
retrograde
A musical idea played backwards.(Seep. 53)
ritardando
Gradually slowing down. (Seep. 77)
second (2nd) (step)
The interval that spanstwo letter names. (Ex. C up to D, or F down to E) On the staff: line-to-the-next-space or space-to-the-next-line. (Seepp. 8, 11, 13, 30)
sharp
A sharp raises a note one half step. (Seep. 68)
]ZI4---B-F
=..1_-_1
* ll
--1.-.--.--..slur a
-
fnl t 2 4
3 4
A
l 4 4
staccato
Detached,disconnected.(Seep. 46)
staff
The five lines and four spaceson which notes are written. (Seep. 14)
tempo
The speedof the music. (Seep. 90)
theme
A melody made of severalphrases.(Seep. 44)
third (3rd) (skip)
The interval that spansthree letter names.(Ex. C up to E, or F down to D) On the staff: line-to-the-next-line or space-to-the-next-space. (Seepp. 8, 11, 13,30)
tie
A curved line that connectstwo notes on the sameline or space. Hold for the total countsof both notes.(Seep.34)
time signature
Two numbers at the beginning of a piece (one above the other). The top number indicates the number of beatsper measure; the bottom number indicates the note receiving one beat. (Seepp. 15,46)
tonic
The first note of the scale.(Seepp. 76,86)
treble clef
The treble clefis used to show higher notes and is usually on the top staff. It is also called the G clef becausethe treble clef circles around the G line. (Seepp. 14,17)
variation
An alteration of the theme: different notes, rhythm, or dynamics,etc. (SeePerformanceBook p. 11)
waltz
A dancepiece in 3 time. (Seep. 49)
whole note
Four countsor beats.(Seepp. 10, 36)
whole rest
Four beatsof silence, or silence for any whole measure. (Hangsbelow line 4.) (Seep. 52)
d
-E--=,=: :.=-E--=
zo5
A curved line that indicates legato playing. (Seep. 24)
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