The mark used to indicate the increase or decrease of the basic audio level is called a transphoneme mark.
There are five kinds of audio changes:
The upnote (#) indicates that the basic audio level is raised to the half tone.
Downgrading (B) indicates downgrading the basic audio.
A raised sign (×) indicates that two half tones (one whole tone) are raised at the basic audio level ).
The deduplication mark (bb) indicates lowering the basic audio level by two half tones (one full tone ).
Restoration indicates that the audio that has been raised or lowered is restored.
The change mark can be recorded in the online and in the room of the Five-line spectrum; it can be recorded in front of the note and Behind the Music number.
The change mark after the music mark is called a tune sign. Before the new tone is changed, it takes effect for all homophone sounds in the sound column. If you want to change the number in the music, there may be three situations.
If the adjustment occurs at the beginning of a line of music score, you should replace it at the end of the previous line of music score.
First, remember to write clearly, and move the last line forward, so that you can remember to write the new tune.
Increase the number of original escalation or demotion numbers. At this time, you only need to write the new adjustment code on the right of the section line at the change adjustment.
Reduce the number of original escalation or demotion numbers. At this time, you need to change the adjustment line at the left side of the redundant audio mark to restore. Write the new adjustment code on the right of the section line.
Upgrade or downgrade. At this time, you need to restore the original audio mark on the left of the section line at the change adjustment, and write the new tune on the right of the section line.
The change mark placed directly before the note is called a temporary mark. The temporary mark is only valid for the same tone, and only
As of the latest section line, the temporary mark in the Multi-voice music is often only valid for one sound. In order to remind you to abolish the temporary mark used previously, it is sometimes added after the section line.