Notation Errors in Sheet Music β«
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In sheet music, the number of beams (lines) represents the shortness of the note, and only goes up to 64th notes (4 beams)
But in this rare case of Heinrichβs piece, there are actually notes that go up to 4096th! Itβs crazy to see what they look like, with a ridiculous amount of beams, as Iβve circled. But apparently it was an error, and were supposed to have been only 1024th notes, but thatβs still a very high amount!
@Karol you might find this interesting ^^ -
4096 is a value Iβd frequently see on computers as itβs a square root of 2.
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@Karol Yeah, it works it off of 2, and then squares it however many times.
The score platform LilyPond claims to make even shorter notes!
At this point I think itβs just for the fun of it, haha
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Shazz_ Iβd doubt those extremely short notes would be long enough to be audible by an ear.
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@Karol Exactly, haha
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@Karol I canβt even imagine how that would look like on sheet music - itβd be super long, interfering the visibility with other staffs of instruments.
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Shazz_ Turns out, mathematics with computers can formulate wonders beyond visual comprehension.
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Shazz_ how in the actual booty flipping shit can you understand this
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ππ rylie Itβs all in the learning of music fundamentals :)
There are certain limits in some aspects of music too, like whatβs shown here with the note and such. Even with a non-musician eye, some things can look unusual - in a few cases though, it could very well be the proper notation in some complex sheet music, like this section of composer Ravelβs Scarbo:
The squiggles you see are called slurs (you play each note smoothly and consecutively), and some are ridiculously notated all over the place, haha. -