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Ledger, or Leger lines. You add them to the staff for pitches above or below it. (for example, a high C looks like a note with a line through it) If you Google Ledger Lines, im sure you can find more!
Line notes or notes that you see on the staff lines where the line goes right through the note. Any other note can precede or follow a line note, for instance a quarter or half note.
That would be note B first octave.
There are three notes between the bass and treble staves. The D is placed just below the bottom line of the treble staff. The note below that is middle C. This note is written with a line through it called a ledger line. Below middle C is the note B. The B is placed just above the top line of the bass staff.
The ledger lines are an extension of the staff. On the Treble Cleff, the highest line is the note "F". The space at the top of the Treble Cleff going up is the note "G". The next note up requires a ledger line, and is the note "A" Going up again brings us to the space above the first ledger line which is "B". In the Bass Cleff, you go down the scale starting a G as the lowest line on the Staff. Then "F" in the space below, and the "E" note gets the first ledger line below the Bass staff. The second ledger line below is the note "C" An easy way to remember it is the ledger line between both staffs is middle C. Middle C only has one ledger line. Above and below the staff, the C notes have 2 ledger lines.
Downward.
It depends on the notes around it. If the notes before and after it have stem extending down, the stem would go down or vice versa.
Ledger, or Leger lines. You add them to the staff for pitches above or below it. (for example, a high C looks like a note with a line through it) If you Google Ledger Lines, im sure you can find more!
1st line
Line notes or notes that you see on the staff lines where the line goes right through the note. Any other note can precede or follow a line note, for instance a quarter or half note.
The note D is on the second line from the top or the fourth line from the bottom.
That would be note B first octave.
There are three notes between the bass and treble staves. The D is placed just below the bottom line of the treble staff. The note below that is middle C. This note is written with a line through it called a ledger line. Below middle C is the note B. The B is placed just above the top line of the bass staff.
The grand staff consists of a treble stave and a bass stave. They are connected by a vertical line creating a "system". The presence of this vertical line signifies that the two staves (treble and bass) are to be played at the same time.
On the basic staff made up of the G and F clefs, D appears 3 times. D is the middle line of the F clef, it is the bottom space (the space below the lowest line) of the G clef, and it is also the second line down of the G clef. Any note at any of these locations is D.
In the treble clef, the note of b-flat can be found on the third (or middle) line on the staff. In the bass clef, it can be found on top of the top line, and on the first line.
The ledger lines are an extension of the staff. On the Treble Cleff, the highest line is the note "F". The space at the top of the Treble Cleff going up is the note "G". The next note up requires a ledger line, and is the note "A" Going up again brings us to the space above the first ledger line which is "B". In the Bass Cleff, you go down the scale starting a G as the lowest line on the Staff. Then "F" in the space below, and the "E" note gets the first ledger line below the Bass staff. The second ledger line below is the note "C" An easy way to remember it is the ledger line between both staffs is middle C. Middle C only has one ledger line. Above and below the staff, the C notes have 2 ledger lines.