answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

Any note that is above middle C.

User Avatar

Wiki User

12y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: On which part of a keyboard are treble notes found?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

How do you read treble clef parts for tuba?

If it's in treble clef then it should be the same as any other treble clef part. top to bottom the notes are f,e,d,c,b,a,g,f,e


How do you play ode to joy on the keyboard?

These are the notes to Ode To Joy on the Keyboard or Piano EEFGGFEDCCDEEDDEEFGGFEDCCDEDCC That was the first part. DDECDEFEDDEFECDEG This is the second. EEFGGFEDCCDEEDD And that is the last.


The curlicue symbol located at the beginning on a staff of music is called a what?

Its the treble clef. It is used for the soprano (highest part) and alto (second highest) notes.


What are the notes for i know you want me on flute?

It would be easier to find the keyboard part and remove all chords.


What is a treble Cleff in music?

A symbol indicating that the second line from the bottom of a staff represents the pitch of G above middle C. It's the clef that woodwinds play in. Bass clef is played in by brass players. -kani92 A Treble Clef is a symbol which represents the high pitched notes. It is also called the G clef because it starts on the second line of the Staff or Stave.A staff or stave is 5 lines and 4 spaces on which music notes are written on.


Does a community shield count in a treble?

yes as it is used by most football teams as part of their treble.


What instrument plays bass clef?

GuitarBassPianoKeyboardTromboneTubaBaritone/EuphoniumBassoonBass ClarinetBari SaxophoneThis clef is used for the cello, double bass, bass guitar, bassoon, contrabassoon, trombone, euphonium and tuba; for the lower part of keyboard instruments like the piano, organ, and harpsichord (of which the upper part is usually written in treble clef); and for the lowest notes of the horn(English, French, etc.); and the baritone and bass voices.


How do you do a supertonic to tonic cadence?

Supertonic - tonic cadence = Chord 2 followed by chord 1. You should only have two notes in the treble of chord 1. Make sure that the bass part and leading note go to the tonic and add the 3rd note of the chord somewhere in the treble.


Does Michael Jackson use bass clef or treble clef?

His vocals would certainly be using treble clef. Most singer's vocals remain in treble cleff range (with the exception of very deep baritone singers). The bass lines would be in bass clef because they are much lower notes (like the catchy part of Billie Jean, for just one example).


What does it mean when the treble clef is down in the bass clef staff?

normally it means that the left hand will be playing notes in the treble. composers do this when the left hand needs to play notes that are to high to be written in the bass.


What are the different types of clefs and what do they mean?

The standardly used clefs in modern and classical western music are treble clef, bass clef, alto clef, and tenor clef. Alto and tenor clefs are mainly used in vocal pieces but any have been used and can be found in just about any type of music for any part.


On a Baritone are bass clef notes lower than the treble clef?

yes. think of it as trumpet plays treble cleff. (high pitch instruments and sounds) trombone plays bass cleff (lower notes and sounds) The difference between the cleffs is 3 half steps (I believe) Typically bass cleff notes are lower but not always. It depends if the two are the same part. If you are asking about the treble clef baritone vs. bass clef baritone issue in bands, there's a catch: treble clef baritone players read notes written in the treble clef but the sound they make is actually a major 9th (octave + 1 whole step) lower. (E.g. if a treble-clef baritone player sees a middle C on the treble clef, the note that is actually played is a B-flat on the 2nd line from the bottom of the bass clef.) So actually, a bass-clef baritone part and a treble-clef baritone part from the same piece of music are probably identical in sound. They're just written differently. The reason: trumpet players, who usually play in a B-flat transposition (sounds a step lower, their written C comes out B-flat), can switch over to baritone more easily if they continue to read the same clef and finger the notes the same way. (Same thing is true of the saxophones, who all read basically the same range of the treble clef, finger more or less the same, but come out with sounds in very different registers.) It's pretty common, at least in U.S. schools, for baritone players to have started out as trumpet players, and this practice facilitates the switch. Most of the low brass world, though, uses untransposed bass clef--what you see is what you hear. Baritone players are well advised to learn bass clef as soon as possible. Still, they need to understand how the transposed treble-clef parts work--it's part of the environment.