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The Very Beginning: Reading the Staves To get started reading music, you need to understand the note names - the way we refer to all pitches. No matter what your instrument is, itll help to use a piano keyboard to understand how things are organized. The deepest level of note names in English is a scale that begins with the letter A and proceeds up to G. After G it repeats itself, so the note above G is A (and the note below A is G.) ... E F G A B C D E F G A B C ... These are the white keys on the piano. I think most people orient themselves at the piano by finding C (just to the left of the two black keys) - the rest of the notes fall into place from there. A B C D E F G A B C D E F G Piano music is usually written on the grand staff, a combination of treble clef and bass clef. The space in the middle is home to middle C. (Middle C should also be roughly in the center of your keyboard.) treble clef middle C bass clef 2 As we move up and down on the basic scale, well alternate between lines and spaces, like so: Treble Clef On the far left of each staff there is a fancy-looking symbol called a clef. It tells you how to read the pitches on the staff. The treble clef is also known as the G Clef. It draws a loopy circle around the note G. G Bass Clef Bass clef puts two dots around the note F. F 3 Memorizing the Lines and Spaces People like to memorize the lines and spaces on the staff with little mnemonics. The lines on the treble staff are Every Good Boy Does Fine or Every Good Boy Deserves Fudge E G B D F fine does boy good every Remember, in hitting all the lines we are skipping over every other note, or making thirds. A B C D E F G A B C D E F G The spaces in the treble clef spell FACE F A C E The lines in the bass clef are Good Boys Do Fine Always G B D F A 4 And the spaces are All Cows Eat Grass. A C E G Beyond the Mnemonics As you begin to study music, you really dont want to have to stop and count up Every Good Boy... with each new note. Youve got to learn to read the staff as naturally as you can read words. As you learn music on your instrument, hopefully the notes on the staff will become more and more familiar. Also, I am a big fan of a method introduced by Georges Dandelot in his Manuel pratique pour l'etude des cles (Practical Manual for Learning The Clefs). Ill post some PDFs from it on this website. Whats great about the Dandelot book is that it starts with a few important pitches and rolls out the rest in a slow, systematic manner. The text is in French, but as long as you understand how to use the book it doesnt matter. Its very simple. As it begins in treble clef, it uses only Cs and Gs. C G C G So, the first exercise looks something like this. Practice your reading by chanting the names of each note in rhythm, like C! G! C! C! G! and so on. 5 Once you are comfortable with that, move on to the next exercise. Now Dandelot adds little neighbors to each C and G. He also does you the favor, at first, of marking every C and G with a white half note and every neighbor with a blackened-in quarter note. Well ignore this distinction and chant every note at the same speed, like G A G C B C and so on. Thats how it works. I highly recommend this method of practicing your note-reading.