Today, I'll be discussing on the musical staff, Clef, Middle C and Ledger lines. The Musical Staff (or Stave) The Musical Staff is the basic or foundation of music notations. The musical staff consists of 5 horizontal lines and four spaces. It is what the notes are represented on. The musical staff is a diagram on which musical symbols such as notes, sign, rest, clefs, sharp and flat are placed. The Clef According to "Wikipedia" A clef (from French: clef "key") is a musical symbol used to indicate the pitch of written notes. Placed on one of the lines at the beginning of the stave, it indicates the name and pitch of the notes on that line. This line serves as a reference point by which the names of the notes on any other line or space of the stave may be determined. We use Clefs to tell us which notes correspond to which lines or spaces. The names of notes on a staff d...
Helen Paul - It only in Africa that a mother will call her child from next building to give her what's in front of her. Click to listen http://bit.ly/2n4ynti
Hello everyone, whenever you hear or see the term 'flat' or its equivalent, 'sharp', you'd suppose it is accidentals that are being referred to. By accidentals, I mean the alteration of natural keys by one semitone, either higher or lower. In case you've forgotten, that's exactly how the keys in the flat and sharp series are created. In this tutorial, I won't be focusing on accidentals or scale building. I'll be talking about note precision while singing. Yep! I'm addressing we singers. I'm sure you have found yourself in a situation where you actually intend to sing a given note within a particular song, eg G, but you end up sounding something in-between G and Gb or G and G#. When you erroneously go lower, you're singing flat, but when you go higher, you're singing sharp. Most music directors and band leaders mix up the terms, hence, some singers are confused. It is easier to correct yourself when you actually understand what you...
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