When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Clef - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clef

    Baritone clef C major scale, baritone F-clef. Play ⓘ Baritone clef C major scale, baritone C-clef. Play ⓘ When the F-clef is placed on the third line, it is called the baritone clef. Baritone clef was used for the left hand of keyboard music (particularly in France; see Bauyn manuscript) and for baritone parts in vocal music. A C-clef on ...

  3. Pedal keyboard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pedal_keyboard

    The first use of pedals on a pipe organ grew out of the need to hold bass drone notes, to support the polyphonic musical styles that predominated in the Renaissance. Indeed, the term pedal point, which refers to a prolonged bass tone under changing upper harmonies, derives from the use of the organ pedalboard to hold sustained bass notes. [2]

  4. Percussion notation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percussion_notation

    Non-pitched percussion notation on a conventional staff once commonly employed the bass clef, but the neutral clef (or "percussion clef"), consisting of two parallel vertical lines, is usually preferred now. It is usual to label each instrument and technique the first time it is introduced, or to add an explanatory footnote, to clarify this.

  5. List of musical symbols - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_musical_symbols

    Tenor clef is used for bassoon, cello, trombone, and double bass when the notes get very high, avoiding the use of excessive ledger lines. Until the classical era , C clefs were frequently seen pointing to other lines (it is sometimes called a "movable clef"), mostly in vocal music, but this has been supplanted by the universal use of the ...

  6. Stradella bass system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stradella_bass_system

    96-button Stradella bass layout on an accordion. C is in the middle of the root note row. The Stradella Bass System (sometimes called [1] standard bass) is a buttonboard layout equipped on the bass side of many accordions, which uses columns of buttons arranged in a circle of fifths; this places the principal major chords of a key (I, IV and V) in three adjacent columns.

  7. Bass note - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bass_note

    One of the other pitches of the chord is in the bass. This makes it an inverted chord; The bass note is not one of the notes in the chord. Such a bass note is an additional note, coloring the chord above it. Such a chord is also called a slash chord. Examples with bass note in red: C major chord in root position close position (C), open ...

  8. C minor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C_minor

    C minor is a minor scale based on C, consisting of the pitches C, D, E ...

  9. Subtonic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subtonic

    In music, the subtonic is the degree of a musical scale which is a whole step below the tonic note. In a major key, it is a lowered, or flattened, seventh scale degree (♭). It appears as the seventh scale degree in the natural minor and descending melodic minor scales but not in the major scale.