Whole note=4 beats
Half note= 2 beats
Quarter note= 1 beat
Dotted half note= 3 beats
The rest= 1 beat
Academic discipline that deals with various theactrical, historical, and critical approaches to films.
The Scream is a work of remembered sensation rather than perceived reality. Munch’s approach to the experience of synesthesia, or the union of senses (for example the belief that one might taste a color or smell a musical note), results in the visual depiction of sound and emotion. As such, The Scream represents a key work for the Symbolist movement as well as an important inspiration for the Expressionist movement of the early twentieth century. Symbolist artists of diverse international backgrounds confronted questions regarding the nature of subjectivity and its visual depiction. As Munch himself put it succinctly in a notebook entry on subjective vision written in 1889, “It is not the chair which is to be painted but what the human being has felt in relation to it.” While such events and objects are visually plausible, the work’s effect on the viewer does not depend on one’s familiarity with a precise list of historical, naturalistic, or formal sources. Rather, Munch sought to express internal emotions through external forms and thereby provide a visual image for a universal human experience.
https://www.khanacademy.org/humanities/ap-art-history/later-europe-and-americas/modernity-ap/a/munch-the-scream
In music theory<span>, a </span>scale<span> is any set of musical </span>notes<span> ordered by </span>fundamental frequency<span> or </span>pitch<span>. A scale ordered by increasing pitch is an ascending scale, and a scale ordered by decreasing pitch is a descending scale. Some scales contain different pitches when ascending than when descending, for example, the </span>melodic minor scale<span>.</span>