Finally, we'll be checking out one possible way that you could combine all of our node values so far. This is the trickiest example. So let's talk through it bah bah bah. Firstly, notice that I've dropped the tempo to 60 beats per minute to make the 16th notes easier to count. In the first part, we see two quarter notes making up the first and second beat, followed by two eighth notes making up the third beat. Then we have an eighth rest indicating that the first half of beat four should be silent, and an eighth note on the second half of beat four.
In part two, we have a C chord made up of half nodes, followed by a quarter rest indicating silence for B three, and a C chord made up of quarter notes comprising before. In bar three, we have two eighth notes making up the first beat. Then an eighth rest indicating silence for the first half of B two and an eighth note on the second half of B two Then we have a coordinate for B three, followed by four 16th notes making a beat for and note how they're all joined by a common double flag. In bar four things get a little trickier. The first beat is easy enough, just a regular quarter note. Then the next three note values all have to do with just the second beat.
We have an eighth rest indicating that the first half of beat to his son and then we have a 16th rest, indicating that the third 16th of the beat is also sign it that leaves only the fourth 16th of b to be heard as a single 16th note. Lastly, we have a half note making up beats three and four of the bar. It's taken listen