This note value contains 4 beats in 4/4 time
What is a whole note?
The bottom line in treble clef?
What is E?
The lowest instrument in the brass family.
What is the tuba?
Articulation marking telling the player not to separate or tongue the notes.
What is a slur?
This term refers to the volume at which music is played.
What are dynamics?
The total number of eighth notes allowed in 1 measure of 3/4 time.
What is 6?
The top space in treble clef?
What is E?
The flute belongs to this family of instruments
what is woodwinds?
Articulation marking telling the player to play the beginning of the note more aggressively
What is an accent?
This term refers to the duration of notes, for example, eighth notes, whole notes, etc.
What is rhythm?
This note value gets one beat in 2/2 (CUT TIME).
What is half note?
The bottom space in bass clef?
What is A?
The saxophone belongs to this family of instruments.
What is woodwind?
Articulation marking indicating that notes should be played with space or separation.
What is staccato?
This term refers to how high or low a sound is and is identified by the letter name of the note.
What is pitch?
This rhythmic pattern occurs when the the long or heavy note is NOT on the beat - often an eighth-quarter-eighth pattern.
What is a syncopation?
One note underneath the bottom line in treble clef.
What is D?
This instrument requires a tremendous amount of air because so much air is wasted as the player's lips are the only resistance.
What is the flute?
Articulation marking telling the player to play each note full value or smoothly?
What is tenuto?
This term refers to the speed of the beat, for example, allegro, moderato, andante.
What is tempo?
The number of 16th notes in a quarter note.
What is 4?
One note above the top line in bass clef.
What is B?
The highest pitched brass instrument in most middle school and high school bands.
What is the trumpet?
Behind the top teeth
Where do flutes and brass tongue?
This term refers to how a note is started or initiated, such as with a tongue, slur, accent, etc.
What is articulation?