the five lines in which music is written on is called a Stave..:) staff
Lines added to the stave when notes are below or above the top of the stave are called "ledger lines" or "leger lines". They can occur in any stave indicating an instrument with melody.
Music Notes are written on a stave. A stave has 5 Lines and spaces. Notes can either go on the lines or in the spaces. If you are piano player you might play on a grand stave or sometime spelt grand staff. That is where you have 2 stave's joint together. Hope this helps
It is just about the presentation of the music (how it looks). If the stem of every note on the stave was the same, the stems would go too far up and if there's a stave above that one,stems would encroach on where extra 'leger lines' would be drawn and the music would look messy. By turning the stem 'upside-down', the stem drops down the stave instead, making the music look neater.It DOES NOT change the timing or pitch of any note.
They're the same thing it's just two different spellings, similar to the difference between the American "color" and British "colour." However, when you are using the plural of "staff" it would be staves and not staffs. I'm guessing that's where the term stave would have originated. They can be usedinterchangeably.
there is no such thing as a mental illness which stops you from being able to read a music stave.
Yes, the keyword "notes" can be written on a stave in music notation.
treble clef
the five lines in which music is written on is called a Stave..:) staff
A stave consists of five horizontal lines that music notes are written on. It serves as a framework for musical notation and helps musicians interpret pitch and timing while reading sheet music.
Lines added to the stave when notes are below or above the top of the stave are called "ledger lines" or "leger lines". They can occur in any stave indicating an instrument with melody.
Music Notes are written on a stave. A stave has 5 Lines and spaces. Notes can either go on the lines or in the spaces. If you are piano player you might play on a grand stave or sometime spelt grand staff. That is where you have 2 stave's joint together. Hope this helps
It is just about the presentation of the music (how it looks). If the stem of every note on the stave was the same, the stems would go too far up and if there's a stave above that one,stems would encroach on where extra 'leger lines' would be drawn and the music would look messy. By turning the stem 'upside-down', the stem drops down the stave instead, making the music look neater.It DOES NOT change the timing or pitch of any note.
There are only five staves in A Chrstmas Carol. each stave (stave being used for music and song) setting out Scrooges life to that fateful Christmas Eve
They're the same thing it's just two different spellings, similar to the difference between the American "color" and British "colour." However, when you are using the plural of "staff" it would be staves and not staffs. I'm guessing that's where the term stave would have originated. They can be usedinterchangeably.
Winter Music Conference was created in 1985.
A stave is a piece of wood cut from the tree usually just a split quarter of the tree. It is before any work is done to it except splitting. Also it is the full length of the bow.