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Multimedia Sound Production. Notes of the Treble and Bass Staves. Agenda. Note Values on the Treble Stave Note Values on the Bass Stave Ledger Line Note Values Staves and Ledger Lines Combined Mapping Stave Values to a 49 Note MIDI Keyboard. Theory and Conventions.
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Multimedia Sound Production Notes of the Treble and Bass Staves
Agenda • Note Values on the Treble Stave • Note Values on the Bass Stave • Ledger Line Note Values • Staves and Ledger Lines Combined • Mapping Stave Values to a 49 Note MIDI Keyboard
Theory and Conventions • Musical notes are written on a Stave - also written as Staff • Note values below a certain pitch are written on the Bass Stave • Notes values above a certain pitch are written on the Treble Stave • Note values that are outside the range of the bass and treble stave are written on Ledger Lines • Each stave is identified by a special symbol called a Clef • The Treble Clef identifies the treble stave • The Bass Clef identifies the bass stave • The note Middle C is midway between the bass and treble stave
Symbol for the Treble Clef Notes on the Treble Stave Space notes E C A F Line notes B G D F E
Symbol for the Bass Clef Notes on the Bass Stave Space notes G E C A Line notes D B F A G
Notes Between the Bass and Treble Staves B Middle C D
The convention is to write notes on or above the stave middle line with tail facing down
Notes two ledger lines above and below the staves are both C C C
These notes correspond to the bass and treble limits of a 49 - note keyboard C1 C5
The Transpose Octave switch can map keys to other zones of an 88 note keyboard Thus a smaller keyboard can still access all of the available 88 notes
Write all the notes on the staves from C1 to C5 Start by writing all the C notes, then D, E, F, G, A, B
MIDI 49-note Keyboard mapped to pitch values C1..C5 (Logic Values) Middle C C1 D1 E1 F1 G1 A1 B1 C2 D2 E2 F2 G2 A2 B2 C3 D3 E3 F3 G3 A3 B3 C4 D4 E4 F4 G4 A4 B4 C5
Essential Reading Read the following to support and extend your understanding: Charlton: pages 22-40 Treble Stave note recognition and related exercises