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LESSON 1: Staff, names of notes, treble clef

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    - [Tutor] In our section on Note Values,
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    we discussed whole notes,
    half notes, quarter notes,
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    eighth notes, sixteenth
    notes, sometimes with dots,
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    all different note values.
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    Now let's place these notes,
    so they can represent a pitch,
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    a pitch is a sound determined
    by the speed of a vibration
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    from the source of the sound,
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    a source means in our
    case, musical instrument
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    and these vibrations create a pitch,
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    the thinner the vibration,
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    the faster the vibration,
    the higher the pitch,
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    the slower the vibration,
    the lower the pitch.
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    We begin with a staff or a stave,
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    which has five parallel lines,
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    any one of our notes can be placed
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    on one of these five lines or four spaces.
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    Let's work with a whole note.
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    Now, the next element to
    identifying a pitch is added,
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    that's called a clef,
    there are many clefs,
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    but let's start working
    with the treble clef,
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    each note placed on the
    treble clef has a name,
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    corresponding to the first
    seven letters of the alphabet,
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    starting with A and ending with G,
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    these seven note names
    are repeated indefinitely.
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    On the staff with a treble
    clef, A is on the second space,
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    continuing up, the next note is B,
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    that'll be on the third line,
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    then the third space is C,
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    the fourth line is D,
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    the fourth space, E,
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    the fifth line, F
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    and above the staff, a G.
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    Now we can see the succession of notes
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    from A to G on the treble clef staff.
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    If we place a note below or lower
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    than the second space A on
    the second line, it is a G,
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    remember the alphabet goes from
    A to G, A, B, C, D, E, F, G,
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    and if we go down, we
    reverse the alphabet,
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    so that line, second line becomes a G,
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    the first space, an F,
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    the lowest line an E
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    and below the staff a D.
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    As the notes ascend, the
    pitch becomes higher,
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    when the notes descend,
    the pitch becomes lower,
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    this is true of all
    traditional music notation.
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    The treble clef is
    sometimes called a G clef,
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    because it circles the
    G on the second line,
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    this clef is used for treble
    instruments and voices
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    or the highest pitched
    instruments and voices,
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    the soprano voice and
    instruments like flute,
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    oboe, clarinet,
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    trumpet, horn, violin
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    and the upper part of the piano,
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    often played with the right hand.
Title:
LESSON 1: Staff, names of notes, treble clef
Video Language:
English
Duration:
03:10

English subtitles

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