It's called the Grand Staff, and it denotes two handed play, usually featuring the treble clef (anything above middle C & played by right hand), and a bass clef (anything below middle C & played by left hand)
The piano is one instrument that has the range to bridge the two staffs--bass and treble.
It is called a grand staff. It has both treble and bass clefs, as it is two staffs put together. :)
Brian Crain is the composer of the Twilight Piano Series (Twilight Piano Lullaby Hits and New Moon Piano Music). The sheet music for these albums is available at http://briancrain.com
He wrote piano music, solo (with piano accompaniment) pieces for violin and cello. He wrote pieces with orchestral accompaniment for piano, violin, and cello. He wrote chamber music for string quartet and for piano trio (piano, violin and cello). Most of his music is orchestral and operas.
The five lines and four spaces on which notes on a musical page are written, are called a Staff. A Treble Clef and Bass Clef staff are combined for piano music. All notes, quarter notes, half notes, whole notes, etc. are placed on a staff or if they are higher than the staff allows, they use ledger lines. In a piano staff, a ledger line is a short line between the two staffs that is shown when the note Middle C is notated. Ledger lines can also be above the top staff or below the bottom staff.
All of Chopin's music include piano. The Krakowiak Rondo (Op 14) and Grande Valse Brillante (Op 22) are some of his most popular works for the piano and orchestra. His two sets of etudes, 19 nocturnes and 26 preludes are among his well-known piano works.
Yes and no. A glockenspiel is set up just like a piano keyboard, but it is generally played two octaves higher than piano music. Also, the most notes you can play at a time is two (if you have a second striker) so you cannot play chords. Other than those differences, the two are pretty much the same.
The bars or horizontal lines plus the vertical lines marking off the measures, are called the staff. There are several staffs, depending on if you play piano or other low or high-pitched instruments. The two basic staffs, more or less representing two hands playing the piano, or the upper, 'G', or treble clef and the lower, 'F', or bass clef. (The clefs are on the staff to show what musical notes each line or space on the staff the different notes lie).
The grand staff of a piano consists of two staves, one for the right hand and one for the left hand. Notes on the lines and spaces of each staff represent different pitches. The higher the note on the staff, the higher the pitch. The lower the note on the staff, the lower the pitch. Notes can also have different durations, indicated by the shape of the note. To interpret notes on the grand staff, you read the notes from left to right and play them on the corresponding keys of the piano.
A half step in music is the smallest interval between two notes. It is the distance of one key on a piano. A whole step is two half steps put together, or the distance of two keys on a piano.
He was famous for composing German classical music of the Romantic era. His most successful works have been his songs for voice and piano, the A minor piano concerto, two piano sonatas, and various character pieces for solo piano. He was also an influential music critic.
You may have more luck finding original compositions for Violin, Viola and piano trio, but I'm sure there are a number of pieces written for two violins with piano accompaniment. Look for Violin duets at your local music store or music library.