Contenu: Hindemith Paul PrefaceQuarter notes, half notes, and whole notes (and rests)High, medium, and low tones2/4 and 4/4 metersG clef, and tones f', g', a', b'Eighth notes and sixteenth notesTones e' and c'3/4 meter, dotted half notes, tiesTones d' and c'octaveledger linesone and two lined octavesSlurssyllable divisionup beatsdynamic accentsDotted quarter and eighth notes (and rests)Small octavemajor scale# and naturaldiatonic and chromatic half toneskey signaturesTime signatures of simple meters having the denominators 1, 2, 8, and 16indications for slow and moderate tempibrevis and dotted whole notesThree and four lined octavesbDouble dotted notes (and rests)thirty second and sixty fourth notesindications for fast tempiBass clefgreat octaveintervalsperfect fifth and fourthinversionsMetric accentsmeter and rhythmcundoctors' patterns for beating timesyncopationcompound metersContra octrave and sub contra octavemajor and minor thirds and sixthstranspositionTriplets and other divisions by factors not implied in the time signaturesMajor and minor seconds and seventhsIndications for changing tempiMeters with signatures having the numerators 5, 7, etc. and corresponding patterns for beating timeAlto clefaugmented and diminished intervalsprime or unsonx and bbenharmonic transcriptioncircle of fifths, circle of fourthsIndications of dynamics and expressionsMusical FormTenor clefintervals exceeding the octavedoubly diminshed or augmented intervalsminor scale (all forms)Church Modesrelative major and minorsignatures of minor keysAbbreviationsrests longer than one measureornamentsmarks of articulationchromatic scalePreface to Part TwoDictations (incl. discussion of 'absolute pitch')Index
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