Whole note

   

Figure 1. A whole note and a whole rest.
Enlarge
Figure 1. A whole note and a whole rest.

In music, a whole note or semibreve is a note notated with a hollow oval note head, like a half note, and no note stem (see Figure 1). Its length is equal to four beats in 4/4 time or is sometimes used to last the entire duration of a measure even if, in the time signature, a measure is not the length of a whole note long. Most other notes divide the whole note; half notes are played for one half the duration of the whole note, quarter notes are each played for one quarter the duration, etc. The note twice the length of the whole note is the double whole note (or breve).

A similar symbol is the whole rest (or semibreve rest), which usually denotes a silence for the same duration. However, it is often used to denote a rest lasting a full bar, whether that bar lasts four beats or not - for example, it is often used to denote a full bar rest in 3/4 time. Whole rests are drawn as filled-in rectangles hanging under the second line from the top of the musical staff.


Musical notation

Edit (http://www.centipedia.com/index.php?title=Template:Musical_notation&action=edit)
Staff : Clef | Key signature | Time signature | Note | Rest | Tempo | Dynamics | Leger lines
Note length : Longa | Breve | Semibreve | Minim | Crotchet | Quaver | Semiquaver | Demisemiquaver | Hemidemisemiquaver


es:Redonda (nota) fr:Ronde (musique) pl:Cała_nuta

Retrieved from "http://www.centipedia.com/articles/Whole_note"

This page has been accessed 357 times. This page was last modified 21:53, 29 Oct 2004. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License (see Copyrights for details).