Can the musicians here explain what a hemidemisemiquaver is and how it is played. Is played as a trill? are there any famous instances in music?
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Hemidemisemiquaver
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Hemidemisemiquaver is just the British term for 64th note. There is nothing special about it; it's not an automatic trill or anything like that. It looks like an eighth note except with four flags instead of one. And just as an eighth note is played for 1/8 of a beat, a 64th note is played for 1/64 of a beat.
They are common in music. For example, the opening Grave to Beethoven's Piano Sonata No. 8, the "Pathetique," has them.
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You find them predominantly in music of a slow tempo and Beethoven's music has many examples.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sixty-fourth_note'Man know thyself'
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Originally posted by Michael View PostApologies for having hi-jacked this topic on another thread. I still find it amazing that the hemi-thingummy appears in slow music Being a 64th note, I would imagine that it would be used in incredibly fast music - but bear in mind that you are dealing with a musical illiterate.
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Originally posted by Chris View PostWell, it depends what you mean by "fast" music. If by fast, you mean a lot of notes in a short period of time, then yes, 64th notes are generally going to produce fast music. But when you are talking about the actual tempo of a piece, you are talking about how often a beat occurs. Generally, 64th notes are used to make "fast" passages in music at a slow tempo. If you tried to use them in music at a fast tempo, it would probably be mechanically impossible. At a very fast tempo, sixteenth notes would probably give you all the speed you need. The Grave from the "Pathetique" is the perfect example of this - the music is at a very slow tempo, but there are some fast runs in it, and the 64th (and shorter) notes are the exact way this is accomplished.
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