Where the Notes Fall on Staves
Each clef has a stave. Staves are made up of
five lines and four spaces. Each line and space
represents where a particular note will fall.
The treble stave. Starting from bottom to
top, the lines on the treble stave read: E, G,
B, D, F (one note for each line). A well-known
way of remembering this is to say "Every Good
Boy Does Fine" or "Every Good Boy Deserves
Fudge," depending on if you're into chocolate or
not. The spaces in between the lines follow the
same order, and the notes are F, A, C, E,
respectively.

Note how the treble clef, also
called a G clef, encircles the G line. This is a
good way to remember where notes fall, too.
The bass stave. Starting from
bottom to top, the bass stave is: A, C, E, G
(one note for each space rather than each line).
A popular way to remember this is to say "All
Cars Eat Gas" or "All Cows Eat Grass." The
corresponding lines from bottom to top are G, B,
D, F, A, respectively.

Note that the bass clef, also
called the F clef, has dots surrounding the F
line.
In most written music, the
treble and bass staves appear concurrently on
the page, with the treble stave above the bass
stave, separated by an open space (like the
illustration in Notes
and Clefs).
This is because the treble and
bass lines are played simultaneously but written
separately. On a keyboard, for example, the bass
line is played with the left hand and the treble
is played with the right.
Short lines that appear with
notes written above or below a stave are called
ledger lines. For example, middle C (the key
that falls approximately in the center of a
piano) appears on the first ledger line below a
treble stave, or the first ledger line above a
bass stave (see the two diagrams above). Ledger
lines correspond with the main stave lines. The
higher a note falls on a stave (or above), the
higher its pitch will be.
When two or more notes are
written and played as a single unit, they're
called chords.

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