Percussion typically uses the percussion clef, also known as the "percussion staff" or "drum clef."
The piano uses both the treble clef and the bass clef.
The guitar primarily uses the treble clef.
The different clef names used in music notation are treble clef, bass clef, alto clef, and tenor clef.
The different clef symbols used in music notation are the treble clef, bass clef, alto clef, and tenor clef. Each clef indicates which notes are represented on the staff.
There are five musical clefs: treble clef, bass clef, alto clef, tenor clef, and soprano clef.
Neutral Clef or "Percussion Clef"
There is a percussion clef, which is two short vertical lines at the beginning of the staff.
Most percussion is non-pitched, meaning it doesn't play a specific note. So instead of using a treble or bass clef, the percussion clef is two vertical bars, running between the 2nd and 4th lines.
Percussion instruments used to use the bass clef, but nowadays untuned percussion used what is called the neutral clef. The symbol for the neutral clef is two vertical lines, and music is written onto the staff. Each line or space corresponds to a certain drum or symbol.
Maracas are unpitched. They would be notated on the percussion staff.
piano,bass guitar, and the cello all read bass clef
When reading music for a drumkit - yes, there are no key signatures. The clef is a percussion clef. It looks like two vertical and parallel lines that go from the 'A' to the 'C' if you were reading treble clef.
bass clef
violas dont use treble clef they use alto clef
Bass and also tenor clef.
If you mean which clef does a violinist use then it's the treble clef
Since the tambourine is not a melodic instrument, it does not utilize either the bass or treble clef. Like drums, it uses percussion notation to show where specific tones, rudiments, accents, etc are supposed to be used. For more info, see the related link below.