Gary Ewer's
Easy Music Theory

Now available on CD-ROM! The two-CD set includes much more than the web site - instruction sheets, worksheets, quizzes, plus VIDEO of Gary Ewer teaching each lesson! It's a COMPLETE COURSE in music rudiments, perfect for individual, self-directed use, or in the classroom. Click here to order now.

Lesson 2: Notes

Note! This lesson is all about notes.  Once you learn notes, the next step is to get very good at reading them with ease.  No strange gimmicks or tricks.  You'll need real, useful help in getting up to speed with note reading.  So, once you've finished this lesson, go to Note Reading Boot Camp, and see what we have to offer that makes you pretty much a note reading expert.

 

Do you know the alphabet? Then you know one important thing about musical note-names: they follow the letters of the alphabet when ascending:

  

 

As notes go "higher", the letter names follow the pattern of the alphabet. Once reaching the letter 'G', the pattern returns to letter 'A' and continues on.

As you might imagine, when a scale descends (goes downward), the letters go in reverse:

   

 

So as notes go "lower", the letter names follow the pattern of the alphabet backwards. Once reaching the letter 'A', the pattern returns to letter 'G' and continues on.

Please note: These free lessons are NOT the complete Easy Music Theory course!
Only Easy Music Theory on CD-ROM gives you the expanded lessons (you're just viewing our primers right now), a full set of worksheets and quizzes, and the 25 amazing computer videos of Gary actually teaching each lesson. Want a teacher? get the course right now!

Did you know you can watch Gary teaching this lesson? Gary makes music theory easy!
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Here is a diagram of the Grand Staff, with all of the notes labeled:

   

The scale above starts on a low 'E' and proceeds upward for a little more than 3 octaves. An octave is comprised of eight notes, where the bottom and top notes of the octave have the same letter name. The succession of notes shown above starts on a low 'E' and passes through three more 'E's. Therefore we say that the range of this scale is more than three octaves.

You will notice that the "C" in the middle is a note drawn on a leger line. A leger line is a way of extending the range of the staff. Take a look at this example:

Leger line exampleIf you use the diagram of the Grand Staff from above and continue upward from the last given note (G), you will see that this note is actually a 'C'. Theoretically you can have an unlimited number of leger lines, though obviously once you exceed four or five it begins to get difficult to count all those lines! Leger lines can extend up above or below the staff, no matter what clef is used:

   

Ok, do the quiz, and then go over to Note Reading Boot Camp!  See you there!

Here's a screen shot of Gary teaching Lesson 2 in our CD-ROM course:

(Click the thumbnail to see a larger picture.  Click [here] to purchase the course, complete with computer videos.)


Quiz

To take the quiz, click here, then print the resulting page and complete it.

-Back to index-

Lesson 1
Grand Staff
Lesson 5
Durations, Pt.2
Lesson 9
Key Signatures
Lesson 12b
Minor Scales
Lesson 16
Key Identification
Lesson 20
Key Transposition
Lesson 24
Other Clefs
Lesson 2
Notes
Lesson 6
Measures
Lesson 10
Intervals
Lesson 13
Time Signatures
Lesson 17
Triads
Lesson 21
Triad Inversions
Lesson 25
Score Formats
Lesson 3
Keyboard
Lesson 7
Small Intervals
Lesson 11
Interval Inversions
Lesson 14
Measure Completion
Lesson 18
Octave Transposition
Lesson 22
Cadences
Lesson 26
Secondary Dominant Triads
Lesson 4
Durations, Pt.1
Lesson 8
Major Scales
Lesson 12a
Dbl Sharps- Dbl Flats
Lesson 15
Tonic & Dominant Triads
Lesson 19
Triplets & Other "Tuplets"
Lesson 23
Modes



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©1999-2007, Gary Ewer, B.Mus
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