![]() Whole Note RestĪ whole note rest is also known as “whole rest” or “semibreve rest” in British. Breve rests are usually used to indicate long silent pauses that aren’t split into separate bars. They’re usually drawn as an opaque or filled-in vertical rectangle that occupies the whole space between 2nd and 3rd lines from the top of the musical staff. It’s considered the second long rest value that is still in use in modern sheet music.Īs the name suggests, this note indicates silence for double the duration of a whole note, which means that the player should pause for 8 beats in a 4/4 time signature. ![]() Listen to the intro of 'Sibelius - The Swan of Tuonela'.A double whole note rest is also known as a “double rest” or “breve rest” in British. ![]() More than one note at a time would rather be played and annotated as arpeggio and is something for solo players and rarely used for groups. In case there were two or more notes in a violin orchestral-score you will very likely find a ' div.' annotation which stands for ' divisi', meaning that you group your violins in two or more groups (beside the division of 1st and 2nd violins) and let them play a tremolo on one note each group. This would just mean a tremolo on one note so a notation with whole-note tremolos would be accurate. This applies to piano-scores.įor an instrument like a violin you will rather find single melody notes - no chords. And further down the line you would have problems to write grouped-note tremolos like in bar 7 (both hands). Others even write two whole-notes (one above the other) with the tremolo-beams above or below them - never in-between.īut IMHO the latter doesn't convey the idea of fast changing between two notes (to imitate the tremolo) as good as the split model does. Some editors - for conformity reasons - even detach the tremolo-beams from the stems of half-notes. For half-notes there's no danger as they can't have beams anyway. In order not to be confused with regular 32th notes the beams have to be detached from the stems of shorter notes. In a very slow tempo you would definitely hear the rhythm of 32th notes which is definitely not desired, so just TREMOLO. It has nothing to do with 32th notes - just as fast as you can - imitating the Timpanis. The melody of the OP shows the accurate way how to do it for the whole score.Īnd by the way - the 32th notation on half notes just means TREMOLO in general. So he should have done for the left hand as well - there's no reason against it. The editor could have written a triple dotted half-note in the melody but he didn't for clarity reasons. But be careful with long notes stretching over the midst of a bar, sometimes a ligature of two shorter notes is better and preferred. The triple dotted half-note doesn't convey as much information about the rhythmical structure of the bar as a split model does - but don't split it too much, like the second example - above all without necessity. The two computer prints by User8773 show of two confusing versions of both extremes. Conformity in every line of the score is key! Just imagine a full-score with a different notation of the same notion in every line! A half-note + a double dotted quarter-note would be the perfect notation for the tremolos as well. One has to add that the left hand tremolo notation in bar 6 of the OP is sub-optimal and rather confusing.Ī better way is already demonstrated in the melody of the same bar.
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