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Moonlight Sonata 3rd Movement (Beethoven) Sheet Music

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Uploaded by on Sep 5, 2009

3rd movement, not first.

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Music

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Standard YouTube License

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Uploader Comments (hayama317)

  • on 0:06 you had wrongly put base clef on the treble clef

  • @GuildWars201 No I didn't.

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  • What was Ludwig smoking when he composed this?

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All Comments (163)

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  • sounds like N64 game sounds

  • This is my all time favourite on the piano. I'm playng little over one year (self thought) and its going better than expected. Lot of sweath though!

  • @GibsonLesBud i didn't

  • @GuildWars201 are you serious?

  • @ThePatrickboulet Oh my god, you did not make this remark... Please say you didn't.

  • @MrsFunsocks You are so wrong. What isausol writes is perfectly right, and if you had a brain OR studied music theory with it you, would know that there is only a half tone between E/F and BC. Thats music theory! EVERY KEY ON THE PIANO IS A HALF TONE APART!!!!! Now shut up and read a book! I Suggest usic theory for dummies.

  • @GuildWars201 putting the base clef for the right hand is just a way of not writing lejer (spelling?) lines, its played by the right hand below the middle C

  • @MrsFunsocks You are an idiot, a whole tone is two semitones or a major second. So a whole tone from E is an F#, not an F. A whole tone in the american system is also known as a whole step. For further iteration of this fact, it is also 200 cents in tuning in the equal temperament system where a semitone is 100 cents. I am not going to stop fighting someone who is stupidly saying I am wrong when I am clearly not and they are. Go back to school and learn music theory.

  • @isausol LOL. Not ambiguous? And I quote, "basically it is a whole tone above the notated note. So if you have F double sharp, you play a G natural." Right... So if I have an E, that means I play a F. From what you said of course. Still, retarded. It's YouTube buddy, just accept you were wrong. A "whole tone" does not mean two steps, it means the note above, regardless of steps. F# to G# and so forth. That meaning, B double sharp would mean C? You're wrong. Just stop fighting it.

  • @MrsFunsocks Lack of knowledge? I'm sorry, I actually have studied music at A Level thank you very much. I do not need a "Google Search" for my data. Also, I never mentioned anything about a B or a C at all. All I posted was a link to wikipedia's image of a C# and a C double sharp to show what a double sharp looked like. I wasn't ambiguous at all with my answer in any way. You need to take a good look at oneself before passing judgement on others.

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