Curved Line Over Notes In Music

Curved Line Over Notes In Music: In music notation, a tie is a curved line connecting the heads of two notes of the same pitch, indicating that they are to be played as a single note with a duration equal to the sum of the individual notes’ values. A tie is similar in appearance to a slur; however, slurs join notes of different pitches which need to be played independently, but seamlessly (legato).

A tie is a curved line above or below two notes of the same pitch, which indicates that they are to be performed like one note equal in length to the two.

A writer in 1901, said that the following definition is preferable to the previous:

A tie is a curved line connecting two notes of the same pitch, to show that the second is a continuation of the first.

Other sources:

Ties…are a notational device used to show the prolongation of a note into succeeding beats, as opposed to a repetition of a note. … Our modern tie-mark, first systematically used in the early sixteenth century [Baroque music], is a curved line that connects the two successive note-heads indicating, together, the total time value desired. … Ties are normally employed to join the time-value of two notes of identical pitch.

The tie is a curved line that connects two adjacent notes of the same pitch into a single sound with a duration equal to the sum of both note values.

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