well meybe people should answer the DAME question, like for petes sake losers
The Staff or Stave is 5 lines and 4 spaces on which music is written on.
The four-line staff works the same as the modern five-line staff. It was used hundreds of years ago for choral (vocal) music, mainly in the Church. Being that music at the time was written using a relatively limited melodic range, a fifth line wasn't needed.
The lines are called a staff. The staff is what music is read off of. There are two types of ways music is written on staffs. There is treble clef and bass clef. Bass clef is used for lower instruments (i.e.-trombone, baritone). Each line and space on the staff has a different name/note meaning. For treble clef the notes are (from bottom line to top, including spaces-) E,F,G,A,B,C,D,E,F. For treble clef the notes are G,A,B,C,D,E,F,G,A.
One ledger line below the treble clef staff, or one ledger line above the bass clef staff, or the middle line in alto clef, or the 4th line in tenor clef.
One ledger line below the treble clef staff, or one ledger line above the bass clef staff, or the middle line in alto clef, or the 4th line in tenor clef.
middle C could be written in bass and treble clefs.
The four-line staff works the same as the modern five-line staff. It was used hundreds of years ago for choral (vocal) music, mainly in the Church. Being that music at the time was written using a relatively limited melodic range, a fifth line wasn't needed.
Music is typically written on five horizontal lines called a staff. Each line and space on the staff represents a different pitch in music notation. The staff helps musicians to read and interpret musical notes and rhythms.
There was no specific number of lines for a medieval musical staff. Some of the music was written with no lines at all. Some had one line, and others four. A lot of music was written in tablature notation, with a line for each string on the instrument that was used to play the music.
A Music Staff
Bar lines divide the staff into measures
There is no name for line number 5 of the staff its a trick question (if you are doing a music crossword like i am) the answer is its the top line. i looked it up
The lines are called a staff. The staff is what music is read off of. There are two types of ways music is written on staffs. There is treble clef and bass clef. Bass clef is used for lower instruments (i.e.-trombone, baritone). Each line and space on the staff has a different name/note meaning. For treble clef the notes are (from bottom line to top, including spaces-) E,F,G,A,B,C,D,E,F. For treble clef the notes are G,A,B,C,D,E,F,G,A.
One ledger line below the treble clef staff, or one ledger line above the bass clef staff, or the middle line in alto clef, or the 4th line in tenor clef.
One ledger line below the treble clef staff, or one ledger line above the bass clef staff, or the middle line in alto clef, or the 4th line in tenor clef.
If it's at the end of a music piece, a double bar line. It looks like a thin, vertical line, with a thicker, vertical line to the right of it. If it's not the end of a piece, usually a measure ends it (a thin vertical line), but not always. Sometimes the measure continues into the next line, in which there is nothing at the end of the staff.
If it's at the end of a music piece, a double bar line. It looks like a thin, vertical line, with a thicker, vertical line to the right of it. If it's not the end of a piece, usually a measure ends it (a thin vertical line), but not always. Sometimes the measure continues into the next line, in which there is nothing at the end of the staff.
middle C could be written in bass and treble clefs.