Notation Handout 1
Notation Handout 1
Hey class! You wanna hear a joke about corona? Well guess what? Not all of us
will get it. Lol!
MUSICAL NOTATION
In the days before audio recording and playback, music was often written out as a
means of preserving and communicating it. To do this, a system of notation was
developed that gives musicians the information they need to play music as the
composer intended it. The musical term ‘Notation’ means the manner in which sounds
are written.
In Europe the monks of medieval times, Middle Ages, were the first to write sounds, and
to indicate their pitch by using horizontal lines. Today’s system of notating music on a
staff traces back to Guido d’Arezzo, an Italian Benedictine monk who lived from
approximately 991 to 1035 A.D. He is credited to creating the four line staff. On this
staff diamond-shaped notes, and other symbols indicating groups of sounds called
‘neumes’. See Ex.1 below.
Ex.1
Before the staff was introduced, this was what music looked like.
Pretty confusing huh? Well, these squiggles (above the words) are also called neumes,
designed to jog the monks memory on what to sing while they performed. This was really hard,
because it was not accurate, you would actually need to have an aural understanding of what it
sounds like BEFORE performing. His system helped with the pitches but needed improvement
on the rhythm. In music, rhythm is just as important and the pitch.
Guido is also credited for creating the musical scale (do re mi fa sol la ti do).
After a while, the use of the staff or ‘stave’ (same thing) constantly changed, using as many as 8
lines to indicate the pitch of sounds. The five line staff was found to be the easiest to read and it
is what we still use today!
Before we dive into reading music, we need to understand
the importance of a few elements, seen as the
roadmap/framework of understanding how to read music.
The Staff/stave
A staff is a set of five lines and four spaces on which notes are written to indicate their pitch.
NOTE: the lines and spaces are numbered from the bottom.
Clefs
The word ‘clef ’ is a French word meaning ‘key’. The clef identifies one line of the staff and gives
it a pitch name.
The two most popular and widely used clefs are the TREBLE AND BASS CLEFS.
Other clefs you might come across are known as the Alto clef and the Tenor clef known as the
C CLEFS.
This clef identifies the second line of the staff as G. This staff is mostly used by instruments with
high pitches.
Mnemonic to remember the treble clef
Lines: E G B D F
Spaces: F A C E
This clef identifies the fourth line of the staff as F. This staff is mostly used by instruments with
low pitches.
Mnemonic to remember the Bass clef
Lines: G B D F A
Spaces: A C E G
The alto clef places middle C the 3rd line and the tenor clef places middle C on the 4th line.
Ex.1
The Grand Staff
The grand staff consists of the notes on the Treble and Bass Staves. These two staves are
joined together by a brace or bracket at the beginning.
This staff is used for instruments that can play low to high sounds, for example, the piano, the
harp and the organ.
The grand staff was developed from the ancient eleven line staff. The middle line was used for
the note called middle C.