The Beginner's Guide to Learning Piano
Chapter 8
Reading Piano Notes, Timing and Dynamics
The Beginner's Guide to Learning PianoWritten music shows you what to play (notes), when to play (timing) and how to play (dynamics). In this chapter we cover these three areas, building on the basics of reading music introduced in Chapter 5. There, you will also find an introduction on what musical notation is and what advantages being able to read notes brings.Note that this chapter will overlap heavily with any lessons or tutorials you are taking. It cannot replace learning with a teacher, online tutorials or an app. Instead, we hope it can serve as an introduction and a memory aid to help you as you learn.
The notes (what to play)
Flats and sharps
Up to now, we only mentioned the white keys, for simplicity. The black keys are flat and sharp notes. They use the same series of letters (A to G) but add “flat” or “sharp” to identify if they are the black key below or above the white key. For clarity, we refer to the white keys, those that are not flat or sharp, as natural notes.- Flats(♭) are the black keys below the named note: e.g. B♭ ”B flat” is the black key below B
- Sharps(♯) are the black keys above the named note: e.g. C♯ “C sharp” is the black key above C
- Naturals(♮) are the white keys, the named note: e.g. D♮ ”D natural” is simply D
Key Signatures
Starting at C and playing only the white keys, you are limited to the “key signature” of C major. This is only one of countless key signatures, one that uses no black keys. When playing in F major, for example, every B drops to B♭, while D major raises F to F♯ and C to C♯. Other keys use far more black keys, and B major uses all five.Unless you want to go deep into music theory, don’t worry about learning which key signature uses which flats and sharps for now. It is always marked in the sheet music. To save space, notes that are consistently flat or sharp are marked with ♭ or ♯ after the clef symbol at the beginning of each staff.Accidentals and Naturals
Most music will not stick entirely to a key signature, adding extra flats or sharps throughout. These are called “accidentals”. If an accidental is marked, we carry it forward to the next vertical line (this marks the end of a “measure” - more detail on this in the “Timing” section). A B♭ marked at the start of a measure lowers all following B notes in that measure down to B♭. The next measure will revert to whatever is marked in the key signature at the beginning of the staff.The natural (♮) symbol tells the reader to play the white key, ignoring the flats or sharps in the key signature, or earlier in the measure. This symbol is only valid for one measure.The bass clef
So far we have concentrated on the top half of the grand staff, the treble clef. This contains notes above middle C, and is usually played by the right hand. The bottom half is the bass clef, which contains notes below middle C and is usually played by the left hand.Just like the treble clef, you don’t need to count down from middle C to work out the notes. You can use memory aids. Use any of these, or make up your own!
- The four spaces of the bass clef from bottom to top are ACEG - All Cows Eat Grass, or All Cars Eat Gas.
- The five lines of the bass clef are GBDFA - Good Boys Do Fine Always, or Good Burritos Don’t Fall Apart.
- The dots of the bass clef symbol surround the F (thus it is also called the “F clef”).
Timing (when to play)
Written music is split into “measures” (or “bars”), represented by thin vertical lines that cross the staff. Within each measure, different symbols represent different note lengths. A whole note is the longest, with a certain duration depending on the speed of the song. The other note lengths are subdivisions of this whole note. Half notes are half this length, quarters a quarter, eighths an eighth… and so on. You will use these later when we start counting.Note that eighth notes have a "flag“, cutting the length of the quarter note in half. Sixteenth notes have a double flag, cutting it in half again. To clean up the stave, eighth or sixteenth notes played consecutively are grouped together by joining up the flags. This is called “beaming”.
Rests
Gaps between notes, where you play nothing, are rests. This is different to holding a note, so a series of half notes will sound different to a series of quarter notes separated by quarter rests. Just like their note counterparts, whole, half, quarter and eighth rests have their own symbol. To mark shorter rests we add a flag. Each rest symbol has the same number of flags as the note symbol (eighth has one, sixteenth has two, thirty-second has three etc).Time signatures (aka meter)
This tells us how each measure is divided. The most common is 4/4 or “common time”, which has four quarter beats per measure. If you are mathematical, it may help to see it as a fraction. The top figure tells us how many beats are in a measure (in this case four). The bottom figure tells us what time value each beat has (in this case a quarter). By the same logic, 3/4 has three quarter beats to a measure, while 6/8 has six eighth beats to a measure.This is easier to grasp if you listen to, learn, and play along with examples of different time signatures. Swan Lake (4/4) and Für Elise (3/4) are a good place to start (both available in the beginner section on flowkey).