The piano is one instrument that has the range to bridge the two staffs--bass and treble.
The five lines that the music is written on is called the stave, or the staff for bass and treble! :)
Yes.
It is called a grand staff. It has both treble and bass clefs, as it is two staffs put together. :)
They aren't. There are 4 clefs; treble, alto, tenor, bass and you don't combine them into one stave.
i think i know the answer... its the grand staff. you were probably doing a crossword puzzle from your teacher. Yeah, Im doing it too.
The five lines that the music is written on is called the stave, or the staff for bass and treble! :)
Yes.
It is called a grand staff. It has both treble and bass clefs, as it is two staffs put together. :)
They aren't. There are 4 clefs; treble, alto, tenor, bass and you don't combine them into one stave.
A musical staff.... For Bass and Treble
(treble/alto/bass/tenor) cleff
The Grand Staff
Middle C
Middle C, which is one ledger line below the treble staff, and one ledger line above the bass staff.
i think i know the answer... its the grand staff. you were probably doing a crossword puzzle from your teacher. Yeah, Im doing it too.
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.
It depends which staff it is. If it is the treble cleff (staff) the answer is E, if it is the Bass cleff, the answer is G.