The clefs in music scores appears way down in the Medieval period: centuries before the modern notation came into practice. The ancient clefs had no names such as treble clef or bass clef. Some of oldest clefs are F clef and G clef. They had no fixed position in the staff: also known as dynamic clefs. The alto clef and tenor clefs are two positions derived from the ancient C clef.
The Clefs was created in 1963.
Les Clefs's population is 472.
The area of Les Clefs is 18.47 square kilometers.
All musical clefs indicate the position of a specific note on the staff. The treble clef is a G clef, because it shows the location of the note G.
Les clefs de babel was created in 2009.
clefs
The three main types of clef signs used in modern music notation are the G-clef, C-clef, and F-clef Placement on different lines of the staff indicate a different tessituras, with nine possible distinct clefs. In contemporary music literature, only four clefs are used regularly: the treble clef, the bass clef, the alto clef, and the tenor clef with the treble and bass clefs the most common.
100,000,000,000,000,000,000,000
Clefs is the plural of clef.
L'homme aux clefs d'or - 1956 is rated/received certificates of: West Germany:16
pentagram