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Whole note
In music, a whole note (American) or semibreve (British) is a note represented by a hollow oval note head, like a half note (or ''minim''), and no note stem (see Figure 1). Its length is equal to four beats in 4/4 time. Most other notes are fractions of the whole note; half notes are played for one half the duration of the whole note, quarter notes (or ''crotchets'') are each played for one quarter the duration, etc. A whole note lasts half as long as a double whole note (or ''breve''—hence the British name, ''semibreve''), and twice as long as a half note, or ''minim''. The symbol is first found in music notation from the late thirteenth century . A related symbol is the whole rest (or semibreve rest), which usually denotes a silence for the same duration. Whole rests are drawn as filled-in rectangles generally hanging under the second line from the top of a musical staff, though they may occasionally be put under a different line in more complicated passages, such as when two instruments or vocalists are written on one staff, and one is temporarily silent. ==Other lengths== The whole note and whole rest may also be used in music of free rhythm, such as Anglican chant, to denote a whole measure, irrespective of the time of that measure. The whole rest can be used this way in almost all or all forms of music.
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