English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

well how do you?
I know that eight notes are 1+2+3+
16th notes are 1e+a2e+a
but what about 32 notes and 64th notes?

i'm just wondering cuz i have some music that i want to play but i have no clue how to count it.

2006-11-27 08:41:00 · 5 answers · asked by dancing_diva 2 in Arts & Humanities Performing Arts

5 answers

Try this....
1 e + e + e + a
2 e + e + e + a
3 e + e + e + a
4 e + e + e + a

Ultimately what I ended up doing was saying

One E Andy Indiana
Two E Andy Indiana
Three E Andy Indiana
Four E Andy Indiana

As far as counting 64th, it is best not to subdivide so low. Just use a lower count at a higher speed and repeat it more often.

That should work for you. That is how I do it.

2006-11-27 08:51:08 · answer #1 · answered by maboot24 5 · 1 0

1eee+eae

Basically all you have to do is count one beat of 16th notes with an "e" after every subdivision.

So instead of 1 e + a we have 1e ee +e ae, make sense?

As for the 64th notes? Sorry, I have NO clue!

2006-11-27 14:18:17 · answer #2 · answered by Pirates_wear_Fedoras 1 · 0 0

There is really no official way to count them that I have heard of but most people just count them like 16 with extra counts in them using what ever little sound they want.

2006-11-27 08:55:49 · answer #3 · answered by bollrog69 1 · 1 0

How about this.

1 e & a half e & a
2 e & a half e & a
3 e & a half e & a
4 e & a half e & a etc.

There is probably a more excepted way of doing this but I think above should do the trick.

2006-11-28 06:14:15 · answer #4 · answered by Metnobal 2 · 0 0

those go way to fast for counting but when you practice them slower, pretend the eight notes are quarter notes and count like that

2006-11-27 10:42:32 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

fedest.com, questions and answers