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Lesson 24- Other Clefs

A clef is a symbol placed at the beginning of a musical staff that indicates the pitch of the notes on that staff. The two most common clefs are the treble clef: and bass clef: . The treble clef is also called the G-clef, because it originated hundreds of years ago as a stylized letter 'G'. The letter 'G' evolved into the scroll-like sign that we know as the treble clef. The bass clef's other name is the F-clef, because it started out as a letter 'F' sitting on a staff, eventually modifying into today's bass clef.


There is another clef, called a C-clef. It looks like this:    The C-clef is written so that it is centered on a line. Wherever the C-clef is centered, that line is considered to be the note 'Middle C'. Depending on the line upon which it is placed, this clef gets a different name:

ALTO CLEF:

In this case, the clef has been centered on the middle line. So here is Middle C, written in this clef:  

  The alto clef is used by violas in an orchestra. Here is a C-major scale, in the treble clef:

Here is that same scale, written in the alto clef:

As with the treble and bass clefs, you can use leger lines to extend the staff upward and/or downward.

TENOR CLEF:

  As you can see, the clef has been placed so that it is centered on the 4th line. That means the 4th line is middle C. Here is the C-major scale above, written in the tenor clef:

There is another tenor clef, commonly called the "vocal tenor clef":   You only usually see this clef in vocal music. Music written in the vocal tenor clef should be read as if it is in treble clef, then sung one octave lower. (Read more about octave transposition in Lesson 18.) Used by tenor voice (hence the name!) Here is the same C-major scale, written in the vocal tenor clef:

NEUTRAL CLEF:

All musical staves require a clef of some sort. Even unpitched percussion music uses a clef. It's called a neutral clef, and looks like this:    With the neutral clef, no pitches are indicated, because this clef is used by instruments that produce no specific pitch: snare drum, bass drum, tom toms, etc. The staff also looks a little unusual: it is obviously a staff for two different percussion instruments, one with a high sound, the other with a low sound. This 2-line staff, with the neutral clef at the beginning would be ideal for two different sizes of tom toms. No specific pitches are indicated when the neutral clef is used, so you would never be asked to transpose something from a neutral clef into another clef!


KEY SIGNATURES IN THE ALTO, TENOR AND VOCAL TENOR CLEFS
Key signatures will be placed differently on each of these clefs. Here is each clef with a key signature of seven sharps and seven flats correctly placed.


Quiz

-Back to index-

Lesson 1
Grand Staff
Lesson 5
Durations, Pt.2
Lesson 9
Key Signatures
Lesson 12b
Minor Scales
Lesson 16
Key Identification
Lesson 20
Key Transposition
Lesson 24
Other Clefs
Lesson 2
Notes
Lesson 6
Measures
Lesson 10
Intervals
Lesson 13
Time Signatures
Lesson 17
Triads
Lesson 21
Triad Inversions
Lesson 25
Score Formats
Lesson 3
Keyboard
Lesson 7
Small Intervals
Lesson 11
Interval Inversions
Lesson 14
Measure Completion
Lesson 18
Octave Transposition
Lesson 22
Cadences
Lesson 26
Secondary Dominant Triads
Lesson 4
Durations, Pt.1
Lesson 8
Major Scales
Lesson 12a
Dbl Sharps- Dbl Flats
Lesson 15
Tonic & Dominant Triads
Lesson 19
Triplets & Other "Tuplets"
Lesson 23
Modes



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