What's the meaning of this extra rest? [duplicate] Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)Notes value surpass the time signature of 4/4What does this notation (bar joining notes) mean?What's the meaning of a note before the time signature?What's the rhythm for 6/8?How to notate a change to triplet feel part-way through a song?Too many notes in this measureRests and rhythmGrouping Syncopated NotesHow to play eighths (quavers) interspersed only with quarter notes (crotchets) in swing timeWhat is the meaning of this small vertical line?Extra beats per measure on one staff

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What's the meaning of this extra rest? [duplicate]



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)Notes value surpass the time signature of 4/4What does this notation (bar joining notes) mean?What's the meaning of a note before the time signature?What's the rhythm for 6/8?How to notate a change to triplet feel part-way through a song?Too many notes in this measureRests and rhythmGrouping Syncopated NotesHow to play eighths (quavers) interspersed only with quarter notes (crotchets) in swing timeWhat is the meaning of this small vertical line?Extra beats per measure on one staff










3
















This question already has an answer here:



  • Notes value surpass the time signature of 4/4

    1 answer



This is the first bar of F. W. Mecham Op 92 - American Patrol



American patrol first bar



Semiquaver triplet + quaver + quaver rest + quarter rest
1/8 + 1/8 + 1/8 + 1/4 = 2/4 + 1/8


What's with the meaning of the extra eighth?










share|improve this question















marked as duplicate by replete, user45266, Tim, Tim H, Richard Mar 27 at 10:30


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.


















  • There is no extra silence.

    – Tim
    Mar 27 at 7:44











  • I also think this question has been answered elsewhere before. But I have another question: are the grace notes always printed with a slure? and does this slur say something for the interpretation? and how can you play this accent on the first eighth note in pppp????

    – Albrecht Hügli
    Mar 27 at 10:03












  • 8th note + 8th rest + quarter rest = 2 beats in 2/4 meter. There aren't any extra values.

    – Michael Curtis
    Mar 27 at 13:06











  • The key to seeing this is the smaller note heads on the grace notes. Hard to miss at first glance but once you realize there would be too many notes if they weren't grace notes it should jump out at you. Moving forward you will see it.

    – b3ko
    Mar 27 at 16:04















3
















This question already has an answer here:



  • Notes value surpass the time signature of 4/4

    1 answer



This is the first bar of F. W. Mecham Op 92 - American Patrol



American patrol first bar



Semiquaver triplet + quaver + quaver rest + quarter rest
1/8 + 1/8 + 1/8 + 1/4 = 2/4 + 1/8


What's with the meaning of the extra eighth?










share|improve this question















marked as duplicate by replete, user45266, Tim, Tim H, Richard Mar 27 at 10:30


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.


















  • There is no extra silence.

    – Tim
    Mar 27 at 7:44











  • I also think this question has been answered elsewhere before. But I have another question: are the grace notes always printed with a slure? and does this slur say something for the interpretation? and how can you play this accent on the first eighth note in pppp????

    – Albrecht Hügli
    Mar 27 at 10:03












  • 8th note + 8th rest + quarter rest = 2 beats in 2/4 meter. There aren't any extra values.

    – Michael Curtis
    Mar 27 at 13:06











  • The key to seeing this is the smaller note heads on the grace notes. Hard to miss at first glance but once you realize there would be too many notes if they weren't grace notes it should jump out at you. Moving forward you will see it.

    – b3ko
    Mar 27 at 16:04













3












3








3









This question already has an answer here:



  • Notes value surpass the time signature of 4/4

    1 answer



This is the first bar of F. W. Mecham Op 92 - American Patrol



American patrol first bar



Semiquaver triplet + quaver + quaver rest + quarter rest
1/8 + 1/8 + 1/8 + 1/4 = 2/4 + 1/8


What's with the meaning of the extra eighth?










share|improve this question

















This question already has an answer here:



  • Notes value surpass the time signature of 4/4

    1 answer



This is the first bar of F. W. Mecham Op 92 - American Patrol



American patrol first bar



Semiquaver triplet + quaver + quaver rest + quarter rest
1/8 + 1/8 + 1/8 + 1/4 = 2/4 + 1/8


What's with the meaning of the extra eighth?





This question already has an answer here:



  • Notes value surpass the time signature of 4/4

    1 answer







notation time-signatures staccato






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 27 at 8:46









Shevliaskovic

20.8k1381173




20.8k1381173










asked Mar 27 at 4:31









xvanxvan

2005




2005




marked as duplicate by replete, user45266, Tim, Tim H, Richard Mar 27 at 10:30


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.









marked as duplicate by replete, user45266, Tim, Tim H, Richard Mar 27 at 10:30


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.














  • There is no extra silence.

    – Tim
    Mar 27 at 7:44











  • I also think this question has been answered elsewhere before. But I have another question: are the grace notes always printed with a slure? and does this slur say something for the interpretation? and how can you play this accent on the first eighth note in pppp????

    – Albrecht Hügli
    Mar 27 at 10:03












  • 8th note + 8th rest + quarter rest = 2 beats in 2/4 meter. There aren't any extra values.

    – Michael Curtis
    Mar 27 at 13:06











  • The key to seeing this is the smaller note heads on the grace notes. Hard to miss at first glance but once you realize there would be too many notes if they weren't grace notes it should jump out at you. Moving forward you will see it.

    – b3ko
    Mar 27 at 16:04

















  • There is no extra silence.

    – Tim
    Mar 27 at 7:44











  • I also think this question has been answered elsewhere before. But I have another question: are the grace notes always printed with a slure? and does this slur say something for the interpretation? and how can you play this accent on the first eighth note in pppp????

    – Albrecht Hügli
    Mar 27 at 10:03












  • 8th note + 8th rest + quarter rest = 2 beats in 2/4 meter. There aren't any extra values.

    – Michael Curtis
    Mar 27 at 13:06











  • The key to seeing this is the smaller note heads on the grace notes. Hard to miss at first glance but once you realize there would be too many notes if they weren't grace notes it should jump out at you. Moving forward you will see it.

    – b3ko
    Mar 27 at 16:04
















There is no extra silence.

– Tim
Mar 27 at 7:44





There is no extra silence.

– Tim
Mar 27 at 7:44













I also think this question has been answered elsewhere before. But I have another question: are the grace notes always printed with a slure? and does this slur say something for the interpretation? and how can you play this accent on the first eighth note in pppp????

– Albrecht Hügli
Mar 27 at 10:03






I also think this question has been answered elsewhere before. But I have another question: are the grace notes always printed with a slure? and does this slur say something for the interpretation? and how can you play this accent on the first eighth note in pppp????

– Albrecht Hügli
Mar 27 at 10:03














8th note + 8th rest + quarter rest = 2 beats in 2/4 meter. There aren't any extra values.

– Michael Curtis
Mar 27 at 13:06





8th note + 8th rest + quarter rest = 2 beats in 2/4 meter. There aren't any extra values.

– Michael Curtis
Mar 27 at 13:06













The key to seeing this is the smaller note heads on the grace notes. Hard to miss at first glance but once you realize there would be too many notes if they weren't grace notes it should jump out at you. Moving forward you will see it.

– b3ko
Mar 27 at 16:04





The key to seeing this is the smaller note heads on the grace notes. Hard to miss at first glance but once you realize there would be too many notes if they weren't grace notes it should jump out at you. Moving forward you will see it.

– b3ko
Mar 27 at 16:04










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















15














The small triplets are grace notes. They exist outside the normal metre of the measure. The D eighth-notes are on the first beat, or downbeat.






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    I thought they were eighth-notes, but I'm English and call them quavers.

    – Andrew Leach
    Mar 27 at 9:21











  • @AndrewLeach Thanks for the catch - I'm from the UK too but most people on this site seem to use the fractional names so I've been following suit. Unsuccessfully in this case!

    – replete
    Mar 27 at 9:25


















1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









15














The small triplets are grace notes. They exist outside the normal metre of the measure. The D eighth-notes are on the first beat, or downbeat.






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    I thought they were eighth-notes, but I'm English and call them quavers.

    – Andrew Leach
    Mar 27 at 9:21











  • @AndrewLeach Thanks for the catch - I'm from the UK too but most people on this site seem to use the fractional names so I've been following suit. Unsuccessfully in this case!

    – replete
    Mar 27 at 9:25
















15














The small triplets are grace notes. They exist outside the normal metre of the measure. The D eighth-notes are on the first beat, or downbeat.






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    I thought they were eighth-notes, but I'm English and call them quavers.

    – Andrew Leach
    Mar 27 at 9:21











  • @AndrewLeach Thanks for the catch - I'm from the UK too but most people on this site seem to use the fractional names so I've been following suit. Unsuccessfully in this case!

    – replete
    Mar 27 at 9:25














15












15








15







The small triplets are grace notes. They exist outside the normal metre of the measure. The D eighth-notes are on the first beat, or downbeat.






share|improve this answer















The small triplets are grace notes. They exist outside the normal metre of the measure. The D eighth-notes are on the first beat, or downbeat.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Mar 27 at 9:25

























answered Mar 27 at 4:39









repletereplete

4,5251532




4,5251532







  • 1





    I thought they were eighth-notes, but I'm English and call them quavers.

    – Andrew Leach
    Mar 27 at 9:21











  • @AndrewLeach Thanks for the catch - I'm from the UK too but most people on this site seem to use the fractional names so I've been following suit. Unsuccessfully in this case!

    – replete
    Mar 27 at 9:25













  • 1





    I thought they were eighth-notes, but I'm English and call them quavers.

    – Andrew Leach
    Mar 27 at 9:21











  • @AndrewLeach Thanks for the catch - I'm from the UK too but most people on this site seem to use the fractional names so I've been following suit. Unsuccessfully in this case!

    – replete
    Mar 27 at 9:25








1




1





I thought they were eighth-notes, but I'm English and call them quavers.

– Andrew Leach
Mar 27 at 9:21





I thought they were eighth-notes, but I'm English and call them quavers.

– Andrew Leach
Mar 27 at 9:21













@AndrewLeach Thanks for the catch - I'm from the UK too but most people on this site seem to use the fractional names so I've been following suit. Unsuccessfully in this case!

– replete
Mar 27 at 9:25






@AndrewLeach Thanks for the catch - I'm from the UK too but most people on this site seem to use the fractional names so I've been following suit. Unsuccessfully in this case!

– replete
Mar 27 at 9:25




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