Lesson 1: The Musical StaffMusic in our "western" culture is written on five lines and four spaces: This collection of lines and spaces is called a
staff. We can refer to each line and each space by its number. A
staff doesn't usually have numbers written beside the lines and spaces.
We've put them there to show the fact that we number them from the bottom.
On the staff we place notes and rests. (You'll find out more about notes
and rests in later lessons.) At the beginning of each staff we place an
object called a "clef". A clef tells us which notes are which. The
two most common clefs are the "treble" clef: Looks familiar? All piano music is written on a grand
staff. hbszfxfs Take a close look at the treble clef: i) Start with the dot at the bottom, and begin to draw
the line upward: ii) Continue upward until you pass the top line of the
staff by a short distance: iii) Swoop to the right and head downward, crossing
the first line you drew at the 4th staff line: iv) Continue the line downward, slowly curving to the
right, so that it eventually "sits" on the bottom line: v) Finish your treble clef with a curl that brushes
the 3rd line, and then crosses the 2nd line: Practice drawing some treble clefs:
The bass clef is quite a bit easier to
draw: i) Start by drawing a dot on the 4th line, then swoop
upward and toward the right, brushing the top line: ii) Continue downward and to the left until you just
graze the 2nd line: iii) Place two dots that straddle the 4th line, fairly
close to the clef: Practice drawing some bass clefs:
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