Sixteenth note
A sixteenth note, also known as a semiquaver in British English, is a musical note that lasts for one-sixteenth the duration of a whole note, equivalent to one-quarter of a beat in common 4/4 time.[1][2] It is notated as a filled-in oval notehead attached to a vertical stem, with two flags extending from the stem end; when multiple sixteenth notes appear consecutively, the flags are typically replaced by two horizontal beams connecting the stems for clarity and grouping.[3][4] In music theory, the sixteenth note subdivides the beat into finer rhythmic divisions, allowing composers and performers to create intricate patterns and syncopations that add complexity and drive to musical phrases, particularly in genres like jazz, funk, and classical compositions requiring precise timing.[5] Four sixteenth notes typically fill one beat in simple meter, and they are counted aloud as "e" and "a" within the standard subdivision of quarter-note beats (e.g., "1 e & a 2 e & a").[1][6] This note value emerged as part of the evolution of mensural notation in Western music during the Renaissance, enabling more rapid and detailed rhythmic expression compared to longer durations like the eighth note, which it halves in length.[7] In performance, accurate execution of sixteenth-note passages demands control over tempo and articulation to maintain musical flow, often using techniques like beaming to visually organize groups of four per beat in staff notation.[8]Definition and Properties
Duration and Value
The sixteenth note, also known as the semiquaver in British terminology, represents one-sixteenth of a whole note (semibreve) or half the duration of an eighth note (quaver) in standard musical notation.[9] In 4/4 time, four sixteenth notes fill one beat, as the quarter note receives one beat and the sixteenth note is one-fourth of a quarter note; more generally, it is one-sixteenth of a whole note, whose duration in beats depends on the time signature.[9] Mathematically, if the whole note is assigned a value of 1, the sixteenth note equals 1/16; the actual time length depends on the tempo in beats per minute (BPM), for example, at 60 BPM in 4/4 time, one sixteenth note lasts approximately 0.25 seconds.[10] This fundamental duration serves as a prerequisite for understanding beaming practices and the construction of more complex rhythms in musical scores.[9]Relation to Other Notes
The sixteenth note occupies a specific position in the hierarchical system of note values used in Western music notation, where durations decrease progressively through binary subdivision.[11] This hierarchy begins with the whole note, valued at 1 measure in 4/4 time, which divides into two half notes (each 1/2), further subdividing into two quarter notes (each 1/4), two eighth notes (each 1/8), and two sixteenth notes (each 1/16).[12] The pattern continues with the sixteenth note dividing into two thirty-second notes (each 1/32), and so on, establishing a clear relational structure among note values.[11] This duple subdivision pattern, in which each successive note value halves the duration of the previous one, reflects the binary rhythmic divisions fundamental to Western musical practice.[11] As a result, the sixteenth note represents a quarter of a quarter note's duration, allowing composers and performers to articulate rhythms with increasing precision.[12] To illustrate these relationships, the following table compares the number of each note value that fits within a single 4/4 measure:| Note Value | Relative Duration | Number per 4/4 Measure |
|---|---|---|
| Whole note | 1 | 1 |
| Half note | 1/2 | 2 |
| Quarter note | 1/4 | 4 |
| Eighth note | 1/8 | 8 |
| Sixteenth note | 1/16 | 16 |
| Thirty-second note | 1/32 | 32 |
Notation
Visual Elements
The sixteenth note is visually composed of a filled black oval notehead, a straight vertical stem, and two flags attached to the end of the stem. The notehead represents the pitch and is solid black to indicate its rhythmic value, distinguishing it from longer-duration notes with open heads.[1][13] The stem's direction is determined by the notehead's position on the staff: it extends upward from the right side of the notehead for notes below the middle line, and downward from the left side for notes on or above the middle line. This convention ensures clarity and balance in the notation. For upward-pointing stems, the two flags attach at the top and curve rightward; for downward-pointing stems, they attach at the bottom and curve leftward.[13][3][14] The standard stem length measures approximately one octave, equivalent to three and a half spaces on the staff, to maintain proportional readability across scores. The notehead is positioned precisely on a line or in a space of the five-line staff, with short horizontal ledger lines added for pitches extending beyond the staff's range.[15][16][13] In Unicode, the basic symbol for a sixteenth note is U+1D161 (𝅘𝅥𝅯) within the Musical Symbols block, facilitating its use in digital typography and software. While handwritten notation may exhibit minor stylistic variations, such as slightly irregular curves, engraved and printed scores strictly follow these components for uniformity and professional presentation.[17][16]Beaming and Rests
In music notation, multiple sixteenth notes are typically grouped using beaming to enhance readability and indicate rhythmic structure. Groups of four sixteenth notes, corresponding to one beat in simple time signatures such as 4/4, are connected by two horizontal beams, replacing the individual flags on each note's stem.[18] This beaming visually represents the subdivision of the beat, making it easier for performers to discern rhythmic patterns at a glance.[19] Beams are applied according to specific rules aligned with the meter. In simple time, sixteenth notes are beamed in sets of four per quarter-note beat; beaming never crosses bar lines or the middle of a measure.[18][19] In compound time, such as 6/8 where the beat is a dotted quarter note, sixteenth notes are instead grouped in sets of six per beat to reflect the ternary subdivision.[18] For incomplete groups, partial beams are used, connecting the available notes with shortened beam segments that slope to maintain clarity, while any remaining single note retains a flag.[19] Beams often slope slightly—upward if the notes ascend in pitch, downward if they descend, or flat if pitches are consistent—to follow the melodic contour and improve legibility.[19] For instance, a quartet of sixteenth notes on consecutive pitches might appear as four filled noteheads with upward stems joined by two parallel beams, contrasting with four individual sixteenth notes each bearing two flags on their stems; the beamed version clearly delineates the beat without altering the duration.[18] The sixteenth rest denotes silence equivalent to one sixteenth of a whole note, or a quarter of a beat in 4/4 time.[20] Its symbol is a compact, slanted zigzag line with two flags extending to the right, resembling an eighth rest with an additional flag.[20] This rest is positioned on or between the staff lines in alignment with the corresponding note's placement, though smaller rests like this are often centered within the staff for visual balance and to avoid overcrowding.[20]Historical Development
Origins in Early Notation
The sixteenth note originated in the mensural notation systems of the 15th century, where it appeared as the semifusa, a short-duration note value employed in proportional rhythmic frameworks to enhance the complexity of polyphonic vocal music. This notation, which measured durations relative to a governing mensuration (such as tempus and prolatio), allowed composers to specify intricate subdivisions beyond the standard semibrevis and minima. The semifusa represented one of the smallest practical note values at the time, facilitating rapid passages and syncopations in ensemble works. In the mensural context, the semifusa functioned as half the duration of the fusa, which itself corresponded to an eighth-note equivalent in modern terms, making the semifusa the prevailing smallest unit for common rhythmic articulations. Distinctions between void (white, hollow) and full (black, filled) note forms were crucial; by the mid-15th century, white notation predominated for larger values, while black forms persisted for diminutive ones like the semifusa to denote their brevity. Composers such as Johannes Ockeghem exemplified its use in polyphonic masses and motets, where semifusae enabled proportional interplay across voices, as seen in his Missa Prolationum and Missa L'homme armé. The semifusa drew influence from earlier medieval practices, including ligatures—grouped notes with inherent rhythmic implications—and neumes, the heighted symbols of plainchant that evolved into more precise mensural forms. These precursors provided a foundation for subdividing beats proportionally, but the 15th-century adoption of the semifusa marked a shift toward greater rhythmic precision in polyphony, bridging the gap from relative proportions (governed by signs like perfect or imperfect tempus) to the emerging absolute durations that would characterize later notation. Its first widespread application occurred around 1450 in manuscripts of the Franco-Flemish school, where scribes and composers integrated semifusae into white mensural notation for motets and masses, reflecting the era's emphasis on rhythmic vitality in sacred polyphony.Standardization in Modern Staff Notation
During the 17th and 18th centuries, the sixteenth note achieved widespread adoption in Baroque staff notation, particularly through the compositions of Johann Sebastian Bach and George Frideric Handel, where it consistently appeared as an oval, filled notehead attached to a straight stem with two downward-curving flags for single notes or equivalent beaming for groups. This form marked a departure from earlier mensural proportions toward metric equality, solidifying the sixteenth note's value as one-fourth of a quarter note in common time signatures. The transition to fully metric notation in the 19th century, aligned with the standardization of equal temperament, further entrenched these conventions in pedagogical treatises, such as Carl Czerny's School of Practical Composition (Op. 600, ca. 1839–1848), which explicitly detailed note values, flags, and beaming practices for instrumental and vocal music. Czerny's work emphasized uniform rhythmic subdivision, influencing conservatory curricula and printed editions across Europe. The influence of printing presses after 1500 accelerated this standardization; Ottaviano Petrucci's movable-type method (1501) enabled precise reproduction of note symbols, including flags and beams, reducing variations in handwritten manuscripts and promoting consistent visual forms in polyphonic scores.[21] By the 20th century, professional music engraving on pewter plates universalized these elements in published works, with standardized tools ensuring alignment, spacing, and legibility in orchestral and piano scores. In modern practice, no substantive changes to the sixteenth note's form have occurred since the early 19th century; digital notation software, such as Sibelius (first released 1993), faithfully reproduces traditional symbols, flags, and beaming while facilitating engraving-like precision in scores.[22] This preservation ensures compatibility with historical editions and contemporary performance needs.Musical Applications
Role in Rhythms
The sixteenth note plays a pivotal role in enhancing rhythmic complexity by facilitating syncopation, where accents are displaced to weaker beats or subdivisions, creating tension and forward momentum in musical phrases. By subdividing the beat into four equal parts, it allows performers to emphasize off-beat positions, such as the "e" or "a" in the counting pattern "1-e-and-a," which disrupts the expected pulse and adds groove to patterns in genres like jazz and funk.[23][24] In polyrhythms, sixteenth notes serve as a fine-grained subdivision that enables layering of contrasting rhythms, such as grouping four against five within the same temporal space, producing interlocking patterns that heighten density and interest without altering the underlying meter.[25] Additionally, they support ornamentation, where rapid alternations like trills or turns are notated using sixteenth notes to embellish principal tones, ensuring these flourishes integrate seamlessly yet distinctly into the melody.[26] Sixteenth notes are particularly prevalent in fast passages, such as scales and arpeggios, where their quarter-beat duration allows for swift, even execution that conveys agility and virtuosity, often grouped in beams of four to visually reinforce the steady pulse. In simple meters like 4/4 time, each quarter-note beat accommodates four sixteenth notes, promoting straightforward duple subdivisions that build energy through repetitive motifs.[27] Conversely, in compound meters such as 6/8, where the beat is a dotted quarter note, six sixteenth notes fit per beat, often treated as triplet groupings to evoke a lilting, flowing quality that contrasts with the crisper articulation in simple time.[27] Their interaction with accents further underscores their rhythmic utility, as sixteenth notes frequently carry off-beat emphasis in grooves, shifting stress to subdivisions like the third sixteenth (the "and" or "a") to create a propulsive feel that interlocks with other instruments. This technique, evident at the sixteenth-note level in syncopated bass lines, alters the groove's perceived pulse, making on-beat elements stand out more vividly upon resolution.[28] Technically, executing sixteenth notes demands precise timing to maintain evenness, especially in intricate patterns; practice often involves metronome subdivisions set to sixteenth-note pulses at slow tempos (e.g., 60 bpm per sixteenth), gradually increasing speed while isolating passages to ensure rhythmic integrity without tension.[29]Examples from Compositions
In Johann Sebastian Bach's Two-Part Invention No. 1 in C major, BWV 772, sixteenth-note motifs form the core of the opening subject, with the "a" motive consisting of four ascending sixteenth notes that drive the imitative counterpoint between voices.[30] These rapid motifs create forward momentum through inversion and augmentation, building rhythmic tension by layering contrapuntal entries that accelerate the perceived speed without altering the underlying pulse.[30] In the second movement of Ludwig van Beethoven's Symphony No. 5 in C minor, Op. 67, the first variation (measures 49–59) features constant sixteenth notes in the string sections, providing a rhythmic drive that contrasts the theme's lyrical dotted rhythms.[31] This figuration, often played with separate bows for articulation, heightens intensity by subdividing the beat into faster divisions, propelling the variation toward harmonic shifts and sustaining the movement's elegant yet propulsive energy.[31] Igor Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring (1913) employs irregular sixteenth-note patterns to evoke primitivism, as seen in sections like "The Augurs of Spring," where ostinato rhythms in the strings feature accented sixteenth notes played staccato to disrupt metric regularity.[32] These jagged divisions, combined with shifting accents, generate primal tension by mimicking ritualistic pulses, accelerating the sense of chaotic urgency in the pagan narrative.[33] In bebop jazz, such as Charlie Parker's improvisations on blues forms, swung sixteenth-note divisions blend with triplets and eighths to create fluid, high-speed lines that emphasize syncopation.[34] This approach builds excitement through dense rhythmic layering, where the swung subdivisions propel solos forward at tempos often exceeding 200 beats per minute, heightening improvisational drive.[34] In popular music, John Bonham's drum fills in Led Zeppelin's "When the Levee Breaks" (1971) highlight sixteenth-note tom rolls during the song's climactic vamp, adding explosive bursts that underscore the track's bluesy intensity.[35] These fills, paired with rolling kick triplets, release built-up tension by accelerating the groove's momentum, culminating in a thunderous resolution that amplifies the song's raw emotional power.[35]Variations and Terminology
International Names
In British English, the sixteenth note is known as the semiquaver, a term derived from "semi-" meaning half and "quaver," the British name for the eighth note, reflecting its duration as half that of an eighth note.[36] This nomenclature originated in the late 16th century, building on earlier mensural notation where the equivalent note was called the semifusa, a Latin term indicating a fused or shortened form.[37] Alternative names for the sixteenth note appear across European languages, often based on fractional divisions or historical precedents. The following table summarizes standard terms in select languages:| Language | Term for Sixteenth Note | Notes on Usage |
|---|---|---|
| French | Double-croche | "Double" indicates twice the hooks of a single-croche (eighth note).[38] |
| German | Sechzehntelnote | Literally "sixteenth note," emphasizing numerical division.[38] |
| Italian | Semicroma | "Semi-" prefix denotes half of a croma (eighth note); historically semifusa in mensural notation.[38] |
| Spanish | Semicorchea | Half of a corchea (eighth note), with "semi-" for subdivision.[38] |