Okay, so in this video, we're just going to be looking at our three examples from the lesson before, which is home notes. And I'm sure you'll recognize those whole notes because we've actually been using them all along. But we've been using home notes just to illustrate pitches on the stage, and we haven't included the actual note value. So we've been putting the whole note just as a, as a pitch, that would be the note G, as you know, a, no B, etc. Now we're going to attach the actual note value to the whole note. And as you know, the whole note lasts for a duration of four beats.
In other words, one bar. So we're going to just write out our examples. And this will be really quick because it's so so easy. It'll be familiar territory to you, I'm sure. So we're going to put our treble clef first with the eight below. Now, we don't have keys signature.
So we know that all the notes on the stave are going to be natural. We're going to put our time signature common time. And we can even put the tempo which is 70 beats per minute. Now we can add our violins, I'm just going to divide the state in which four bars. So bar one, bar two, bar three. And for the last bar, I'm going to put a double bar line, which indicates that the music has come to an end.
Okay, so as you know, we're going to use the node E, and we're just going to put a whole note in every bar. You can't have more than one whole node in a bar because a whole node by its very nature takes up a whole bar. So we have a hot an E note in each bar. And as you know, you can play that a note by playing your high E open string on your guitar. So it could be 12341234, etc. In the second example, we've just added a chord in bars, one and three.
So once again, I'm going to put the common time and divide the state into four parts. Bear in mind that this is considered to be a whole new piece of music. Now normally you wouldn't if you're if this was a piece of music that was carrying on to the next day, I wouldn't write this common time signature again, you only write the time signature once at the beginning of a piece of music. So what we're doing now is we're just adding chord instead of a single node, which as you know is the chord made up of your GP and he open strings. So he just strumming your GB and he open strings and counting 444 beats before moving on to the next bar which is just an E note. And then we have the somebody accordion gpn e and then ending off with the note E. Now in the last example we're just going to add a whole wrist because as you know we want to learn how to rotate silence as well as, as as writing pitches on the stave so so once again, we're going to divide the state into four We're going to do almost exactly the same as the example before.
It all notes will be really easy for you to write. And on both three, what I'm going to do is just do a whole wrist which as you know, it's just a colored rectangle which hangs off of the fourth line. So this is a whole rest, which indicates that we have silence for that whole bar, and then we end off with the E note