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The five parallel lines used to record musical notes are called staffs. The five lines of the staff and the five lines formed by the five lines are calculated from the bottom up.
If the ** work is written on several lines of staves, then these lines of staves must be connected by cleves.
A clef consists of two components: a starting line (a vertical line that connects several lines of staff) and a parenthetical line (a parenthetical line that connects several lines of staff).
There are two types of brackets: floral and straight.
The curly braces are used for the notation of piano, organ, accordion, harp, dulcimer, pipa and other musical instruments.
The brackets are used for ensemble, chorus, and orchestra notation. In the score, parentheses are used to connect the same instruments, dividing them into complete or incomplete groups of instruments. Sometimes auxiliary brackets (flower or straight) are added to the straight brackets to connect the same instrument.
In the score, if the solo part of the solo part includes only one or two lines of staff, only one starting line is drawn on the left, without parentheses.
In order to mark the notes that are too high or too low, many ** are added above or below the staff, these ** are called plus lines, and those above the staff are called plus lines, and the lower ones are called down plus lines.
The room that is generated by the addition of lines is called the plus room, and the plus room above the stave is called the upper plus room, and the lower room is called the lower plus room.
The calculation method of adding line and adding space is: upper line and upper plus between, calculated from bottom to top, and bottom plus line and bottom plus between top and down.
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It's best to find someone to teach you the basic music theory knowledge first, if reading a book from scratch is easy to confuse, knowing the stave is to practice more when you have a clear knowledge of music theory.
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Yes, as long as you know that the lower line of the treble clef is **c, and the upper line of the bass clef is **c, you can launch the rest of the notes.
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The self-study method of learning stave is as follows:
1. First of all, the stave is composed of five lines as the name suggests, counting 12345 from bottom to top, which is the treble clef, so there are also such five lines 12345 in the bass clef, in short, they are counted from the bottom up.
2. In the five-line treble clef, a horizontal bar is added below, this is called the lower plus one line, from this point on this sound is C1, our roll call is do, up in turn, add a RE below, and then a line of MI, the first line of FA, the second line of SO, the second room LA.
3. The third line si, the third do, if it is not enough, you can continue to add upwards, and so on, then this is the treble clef, and you can also do the same in the bass clef, starting from this tone and this tone is opposite, although the two tones are written in different forms.
4. For the treble clef, this note is called the lower plus one line, for the bass clef, this line is called the upper plus one line, down to recognize, do and then down si, la, so, fa, mi, re, do, si, la, so, for the bass clef if we have other staves.
5. You can also add a line downward, down fa, add a line mi, and so on for the rest of the sounds, so that we can simply take the stave as a preliminary understanding and understanding.
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
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
The view of the stave is as follows:
1.The staff is composed of notes, staffs, and cleves, and as long as you master these three parts, you will learn to read the staff, so I will introduce them in detail. >>>More
The five parallel lines used to record musical notes are called staffs. The five lines of the staff and the five lines formed by the five lines are calculated from the bottom up. >>>More