-
At present, the scores used in piano music are basically staves, and simple notations are rare. There used to be a simplified notation version in the early piano textbooks in China, but no one used it anymore because it was not convenient to use. This is mainly due to the characteristics of stave and notation.
First of all: the staff lines and each of the imaginary clusters in between, have a one-to-one correspondence with the notes on the piano keyboard, which means that we can accurately find the keyboard on the piano when we see any note on the staff. Therefore, the image on the stave can easily become an imitation of the coordinates that guide the direction of our hand.
Secondly, the staff has a uniform pattern in recording harmonic chords, which allows us to quickly know the composition of harmonic chords by observing these different patterns, so that we can make quick responses.
-
It is related to the sound on the piano keyboard, which means that we can accurately find the position of the sedan chair and laugh at the position of the speech on the piano. So the image on the staff can easily be the coordinates that guide the direction of our hand.
-
Piano notation is usually recorded in five-source volt notation. The notation of the five positive front lines is the common notation in the world. A method of recording ** on five equally spaced parallel lines, marked with hail notes and other marks of different time values.
-
It's a piano notation, it's actually a stave. However, the Naba stave is a big concept, which includes Qingli vocal notation, instrumental notation such as the sheet music of various instruments, the ensemble score, etc., and the piano notation is only a professional category among the stave Li Chahu people.
-
Yes. For an instrument that is set according to the standard, the position of the note is always the fixed position of the instrument.
The same is true for scores with rising and falling signs.
Nowhere is this clearest to come, for example, the piano.
If you add a line under the treble clef, it will always be on the piano keyboard"**c"。
For example, a treble clef with a sharp sign is always the third black key in a group of small words on the keyboard.
-
Not exactly. For example, the fixed singing of all notes on the staff. This is true in the absence of any sharp and falling marks, but as soon as the tone is changed, or the sharp and falling signs are added, the sound mi may become rising or falling mi, or reborn, re-descending, or reverting in a fixed key.
If you sing in the first key, you have to sing different notes according to different keys, so what you said is not entirely correct.
-
Not exactly. For example, no matter what tone is the same on the third line, it must be si.
But if there is a b symbol in the head of the staff, as you can see in the image, then the si needs to be lowered by half a note.
-
No( The way to play (the piano keys pressed) is different.
-
Here's how to understand piano staff:
1.To recognize the five lines. The order of the five lines of the staff is counted from bottom to top.
The first line at the bottom is called the "first line", the second line is called the "second line", the "third line" and the "fourth line" are counted upwards, and the top line is the "fifth line". The bottom room is called the "first room". Counting up are the second, third, and fourth rooms.
If five lines and four rooms are not enough, you can also add parallel lines, such as "add one up", "add one line", "add two rooms", "add two lines", "add one line", "add two rooms", "add two lines", and so on.
2.Recognize the notes. The staff is composed of three main parts: notes, clefs, and staffs. Whole notes, half notes, quarter notes, eighth notes, and sixteenth notes are the most common notes, and notes are the most important elements in the staff.
3.Recognize the clef. There are 3 types of clefs in the piano's staff:
The first is the G clef, which represents the G of a small group of characters, which is recorded on the second line of the staff, also known as the treble clef; The second is the F clef, which represents the F of the small character group, which is recorded on the fourth line of the staff, also called the bass clef; The third is the C clef, which represents the C of a small group of characters, which can be written on any line of the staff.
4.Know the staff. Staff In piano staff, a figure composed of five parallel horizontal lines is called a staff.
There are many types of cleves, the more commonly used are treble cleves (also known as g-clefs), bass cleves (also known as f-cleves), major cleves, and combined cleves. Depending on the staff, the pitch position between the lines will be different.
-
Here's how to understand piano staff:1. Treble clef:
Add one line and you sing 1 (do), and add one and you sing 2 (re).
One, two, three, four, five, five, one, two, three, to four, please sing 3.
Add one, two, and three lines, four and five lines, add one, two, and three, and sing four and five lines.
2. Bass clef:
Sing 1 on the first line, and 7 on the first line.
One, two, three, four, five, sing 4, one, two, three, four, sing 5.
Add one, two, three lines, four lines and five lines to sing, add one, two or three, four and five to sing.
Piano introduction: The English name of the piano is piano, and piano is the abbreviation of pianoforte. Its mechanisms are:
Keyboards, action, hammers, dampers, strings and pedals. The keyboard of a modern piano is seven octaves, with the lowest note being A; There are also those with a minor third, and the highest note is C (88 keys).
The piano was first used as a solo instrument in 1768 during a performance in England. Modern pianos are mainly divided into upright pianos and grand pianos due to their different shapes and volumes. **The grand piano used by the club is a behemoth of musical instruments, measuring 9 feet long and weighing up to 79 tons.
The most expensive piano to date was a Steinway grand piano from 1888, which was auctioned in New York in 1980 for £180,000. The piano has always been loved by composers because of its unique sound, the full range of 88 keys. It has played an important role in almost all forms of pop, rock, jazz and classical.
-
How to look at piano staff
Beginners can read the piano score from bottom to top five lines, there are two kinds of treble clef and bass clef. A line is added below the treble clef, followed by do, re, mi, fa, so, la, si, do, and so on. The addition of one line to the bass clef is opposite to the addition of one line to the bottom of the treble clef, followed by do, si, la, so, fa, mi, re, do, and so on.
Regardless of whether the treble clef or the bass clef is counted from the bottom to the top, they are the first line, the second line, the third line, the fourth line, the fifth line, and the vacant places, from the bottom to the top, the first, second, third, fourth, and then we look at the notes, and the treble clef adds a line to do, and then counts up in turn as re mi fa, so la xi, do re, and so on, and so on.
Learn about staves and their formulas.
G clef. You sing 1 in the next line, you sing 2 in the next room, 12 3 lines, 3 5 7, 4 lines and 5 lines 2 4, 1 2 3 rooms, 4 6 1 1 in the 4 rooms, 3 in the upper 1 2 3 lines, 5 7 in the 4 5 lines, 5 7 in the upper 1 2 3 lines, 4 5 6 in the 4 5 lines, 4 5 6 in the 4 5 rooms.
Bass clef. Sing 1 on the first line, 7 12 3 on the 1 plus 1, 5 7 2, 4 7 2 on the 4 5 line, 1 2 3, 6 1 3, 5 on the 4 line, 3 1 6 on the 1 2 3 on the 4 5 line, 4 2 7 on the 1 2 3 on the 1 2 3 on the 1 2 3 on the 1 2 3 on the 1 2 3 on the 1 2 3 on the 1 2 3 on the 1 2 3 on the 1 2 3 on the 1 2 3 on the 1 2 3 on the 1 2 3 on the 1 2 3 on the 1 2 3 on the 1 2 3 on the 1 2 3 on the 1 2 3 on the 1 2 3 on the 1 2 3 on the 1 2 3 on the 1 2 3 on the 1 2 3 on the 1 2 3 on the 1
**C sings 1 in the sheet music, i.e., do, d sings 2, i.e., re, and so on. In general, the score for the treble clef is played with the right hand, and the score for the bass clef is played with the left hand.
-
Treble clef: 1st line MI 2nd line SOL 3rd line SI 4 line RE 5 line FA bass clef: 1st line la 2nd line FA 3 line RE 4 line si 5 line SOL (The bass clef is counted from top to bottom, down plus 1 line, down 2 lines, down plus 3 lines, down plus 4 lines, down plus 5 lines, ......)
Treble: Count from bottom to top, add a line down to do (c1), and the third is do (c2) Bass: count from bottom to top, and the second is do (c).
is a sharp sign, B is a falling sign, BB is a heavy fall, and X is a heavy rise.
Rests: Full rest, 2 minutes rest, 4 minutes rest, 8 minutes rest, 16 minutes rest...
-
Look at the problem like you've just started learning and your description looks like you've studied for a few years, and the treble clef and bass clef make up the big staff.
Specifically, the following notation methods are commonly used in the world. It is a method of marking 5 parallel horizontal lines at equal distances with notes and other marks of different time values.
Each line of the stave, and the space between the lines, are called the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 4th lines from bottom to top. If you don't have enough lines, you can add lines and betweens above or below the staff. The plus line and the plus room are respectively called the upper plus 1st line and the upper plus 1st room; Add the 1st line, add the 1st room, etc., each representing 1 tone.
The fixed height of these scales is determined by the clef used. There are 3 types of clef: treble clef, also known as g clef; bass clef, also known as f clef; The alto clef, also known as the C clef.
In order to adapt to the needs of vocals and instruments in different vocal ranges, and to avoid excessive line addition, there are a variety of staffs, of which there are 5 commonly used: the treble clef (with G clef), the bass clef (with F clef), the soprano clef, the alto clef, and the lower alto clef (the last 3 with C clef). Soprano notation performance is no longer commonly used, the alto clef is only used for the viola, and the tenor clef is often used in the higher registers of cello, bassoon, and trombone.
In addition, there are upper bass cleves, mezzo-soprano cleves, etc. Staff are generally classified as: Scores, which record the score of an ensemble or chorus, and are composed of a number of single lines combined.
Score scores, which record the score for each instrument or part of the voice. The large staff, which is composed of a treble clef and a bass clef, is used for piano, organ, harp and mixed chorus. There is a temporary plus line hidden in the two staffs to represent **c, so it is also called the eleventh line staff.
The notation that is currently commonly used in the world. A method of marking ** on five equally spaced parallel lines with notes and other marks of different time values.
-
The lower plus line is 1, commonly known as do, the next plus one is 2, the first line is 3, one is 4, ......and so onThe third room is treble 1......The next plus two is the bass 7, and the lower plus two lines are the bass 6,
-
I don't know if you're a big brother or a big sister. In short, I can't say it in one or two sentences if I want to learn this. I understand the notes, as well as the ornamental sounds, expressions, pedals, styles, and the same markings are also different, depending on whether it is written by a Chinese or a foreigner.
If you really want to learn to understand, or read a book, I can't tell here.
-
How do you read music, you ask? Or do you not know each other at all? Your question is too broad.