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The best way to do this is that practice makes perfect.
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First, the nature is different.
1. Treble spectrum: ** indicates the symbol of the pitch area.
2. Bass spectrum: indicates the stave.
The four lines are f, also known as f clef.
Second, the representation method is different.
1. Treble spectrum: treble clef.
Another name for this fiber is the "G" clef, as it is known by the Latin alphabet.
g".
2. Bass spectrum: bass clef.
The plus line represents the C of the small group, which is C3.
Third, the characteristics are different.
1. Treble Spectrum: Use it to write a staff, called a treble clef.
**c(dol) is on the lower plus line. The second line, which is the line that starts when the treble clef is drawn, specifies the pitch as g (sol).
2. Bass spectrum: The C clef that is used has C three-line clef (alto clef.
For alto violin.
Sosen imitates it, and sometimes it is also a trombone.
used. Encyclopedia - treble clef.
Encyclopedia - Bass clef.
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"treble" is on the staff, and **c(dol) is added to the next line. The second line is the line that starts when you draw the treble clef.
The drawing of this clef starts from the second room. Start with the second line and go up against the third line and draw a half-circle clockwise down, and then draw a circle larger than the beginning of the line against the first line. Then, dodging the opening notch of this circle, go up, to the right, to the fifth line and then to the left, draw a small circle counterclockwise, come back, and define on the fourth line.
Then go down the middle, go through the third line, the second line, and then the first line, and after sticking out your tail, turn left again, draw half a small circle clockwise, and paint a small black dot at the end.
The alto "aligns with the center of the staff, which line is the C of a small group, is usually placed on the third line, sometimes on the fourth line."
The alto clef is also usually divided into alto and tenor. The difference between the two of them is that the position of the little pointed finger in the middle is different. The small cusp of the alto clef is on the third line, and the minor cusp of the tenor clef is on the fourth line.
In the alto clef, the third line in the middle is **c; In the tenor clef, the fourth line is **c.
Bass "on the staff" on the **c do on the plus line.
The bass clef is much easier, and you have to remember it when you draw it; Start with the fourth line. Start with a small dot, then stick to the fifth line, draw a half-circle clockwise, and skim to the left through the fourth line until the second line stops. Then dot a small dot in the third and fourth rooms.
When drawing clef, be sure to draw the leftmost part of each line of staff. Draw every line. Can't be left out.
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The correspondence between the stave bass clef and the short staff is as follows:
The top is the correspondence of the treble clef, and the bottom is the correspondence of the bass clef.
The addition of a line to the bass spectrum is **c......Others and so on ......In fact, the bass spectrum and the treble spectrum are added together, which is a keyboard with **c as the center and extending up and down, if you turn the stave horizontally, it will correspond to the piano keys one by one.
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1. In the notation, there are seven numbers in the basic symbols used to express the pitch of the tone and its relationship, that is, they represent do, re, mi, fa, sol, la, and si.
2. It is impossible to express many high and low tones with only seven notes. In notation, add a "·" above the basic note indicates that the tone rises one octave, which is called a treble; Plus two": indicates that the note is raised by two octaves, which is called a hypersoprano.
Add an additional note below the cardinal note"·"indicates that the tone is lowered by an octave, which is called a bass; Plus two": indicates that the note is lowered by two octaves, which is called the double bass. On the piano keyboard, there are five registers, from left to right, corresponding to treble to bass.
3. Decorative notes: The symbol that indicates the rest (pause) of ** in the score is called a rest. The rests of the short score are denoted by o. Marking the top of a note with ">" or "" or "sf" indicates that the note should be sung (played) strongly.
When the two symbols ">" and " " appear at the same time, it means stronger. The termination line is two vertical lines, one of which is a thin line and a thick line in parallel, the thin one in front and the thick one in the back, indicating the end of the piece.
4. A brief score of two tigers, in which the beat of the red box indicates the rhythm of the song you play, that is, each bar is four beats. The green box indicates that the sol is long and pressed for two beats. The yellow box indicates that a beat is pressed two notes at the same time, i.e., a chord.
5. The purple frame is a rest symbol. The green box is one octave lower than the note.
Generally speaking, there are four basic elements in the composition of all **, and the most important of them are "the pitch of the tone" and "the length of the pitch":
1. The pitch of the pitch: Any piece of music is composed of high and low tones, straight from the piano is the lower the keyboard tone to the left, and the higher the keyboard tone to the right.
2. The length of the tone: In addition to the height of the tone, there is also an important factor that is the length of the tone. The pitch and length of the pitch determine that this piece is different from other pieces, so it becomes the most important basic element of composition.
3. The strength of the sound: The strength of the sound is easy to understand, also called intensity. There will always be some notes that are stronger than the strength of the teaching, and some places are weaker. And the change of dynamics is one of the factors that express emotions in ** works.
4. Sound quality: It can also be called timbre. That is, the instrument or vocals that make **. The same melody pitch is sung by male and female voices with different timbre; The sound of a violin is not the same as that of a piano.
These four items form the basic elements of any piece. It should be said that the simple notation can basically mark these basic elements correctly.
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On the treble clef, on the first line is a group of small characters mi, between the first line is a small word group of fo, on the second line is sa, between the second line is la, on the third line is xi, between the third line is the small word two groups do, on the fourth line is the small word two groups of re, between the four lines is the small word two groups of mi, and on the fifth line is the small word two groups of fo.
If you add a line below the first line is called the next line, if you add a line and the space between the first line is called the next line, if a note (not a rest) appears above the first line is the alto 1, if it appears in the lower line is the alto 2, the first line is the alto 3, and the cycle from 1234567 to the other.
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treble spectrum, line (from bottom to top, the same below), e, g, b, d, f; f, a, c, e; In fact, there is a sound between the line and the line or the room, and it is very easy to remember it by memorizing it a little. Similarly, bass spectrum, line, G, B, D, F, A; a, c, e, g; It can be compared with the lines and in-between on the treble spectrum. Combined with the keyboard, it's easy to remember.
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From the bottom plus one line upwards - do, mi, sol; From the next room upwards - RE, FA, LA. This is in the upward direction. The downside is also from the bottom plus a line down - do, la, fa, re; From the bottom plus two rooms down - si, sol, mi, do; And this descend note is also a note on the bass clef.
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The lower line at the bottom of the stave is the lower plus one line, the lower plus the first line is the tone, and so on, one empty and one tone, one line and one tone.
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When a treble clef appears in the bass clef, it is done according to the pitch marked by the treble clef until the next clef appears. If the bass is suo (fixed solfège), then play mi. Hope it helps.
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The notes after the treble clef are the same as those on the treble clef, until the bass clef appears. I used to play the sound of suo (fixed roll-call), but now I should play mi.
From the bottom to the top, the bottom of the ** on the sound is mi, up to fa, so, la, xi, do, re, mi, one octave apart, the top line is fa >>>More
You're so patient, congratulations.
It's a key signature! Each line and between the stave has a fixed sound name (the lower line is **c, and the number of lines and between) is up, and the name is arranged in order: c d e f g a b c d e f g a b.... >>>More
There are two clefs, treble and bass.
The treble clef is also called the g-note clef: notice the symbol on the far left that resembles a "", which starts from the second line. So the second line is the G sound, which is sol. >>>More
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. >>>More