Now we come to the smallest subdivision of the beat the 16th. Note, which represents obviously, one 16th of a bar, the way you would draw a 16th note is very similar to the way you draw an eighth note, except that you'd have two flags. Now you can have 16th notes that have stems that point up, and 16th notes that have stems that point down. Regardless of which way the stem is pointing, the flags will always be pointing off to the right. Now you can join to 16th notes and you would join them with a common double flag. This would obviously represent one half of a beat.
Other words would have an x node value. You can also join for 16th notes together with a common double flag. This would have the same value as one beat. You wouldn't join more than four 16th notes at a time. Now let's move on to example one from the video before, and we're just going to draw our treble clef. And I've slowed down the tempo to 60 beats per minute just to make the 16th notes easier to count.
Now what we're going to do now is two bars instead of four, just because we have a lot to fit in to each bar, because we're going to have 16 16th notes per box. I'm just going to split the state into two bars. And I'm going to draw four 16th notes on every beat Okay, so now we have two boards. And each bar is filled with 16 16th notes for for every week. And the way we count 16th notes will be like this one and two E and three E and four E and. And that just really helps to effectively split each beat into four equal parts just like we counted one and two and four eighth notes.
You don't have to count it that way. And it can get a little bit cumbersome, especially when the beat is moving faster than 60 beats per minute. But just to learn how to to break the beat into four equal parts can be helpful just one E and two E and three E and four E and so this is how you would clap this first example. I'll just do a count of four beats, one E and two E and three E and four E and 2341234. Next, we're gonna move on to our second example which is just that we have a chord on the first 16th note of each bar. Okay, so now we have exactly the same note value as before, except that we just have a chord on the first 16 note of the bar.
The last thing that we're going to do is just look at the 16th wrist. And that looks exactly like the eighth rest except that it has two flags instead of just one. And it's very easy to draw kind of looks like a backwards f if you want to think of it like that. Now we're going to do example three that incorporates wrists into the rhythm. What we're going to do is we're going to put a 16th rest on the third 16th of the second and the fourth beats like this. Okay, so now that you can see that we have And 16 wrist on the third 16th of the second beat, that's one, two third 16th represented by wrist.
Same in the second one. This is the first beat, second beat one, two third 16th. So this is how you would count through one E and two e rest, three E and four E and so I'll just collect that for you. One e and two, three and four and 12341234