How To Read Notes (Beginner Piano Lesson)

piano notes for beginners Now it's YOUR turn to be the life and soul of the party!. Click Here 👈 sight reading does not ha...

piano notes for beginners

Now it's YOUR turn to be the life and soul of the party!. Click Here 👈

sight reading does not have to be as complicated as it can feel sometimes so today i'm going to be going over just a general overview of how notation works how notes on the staff work so that you can approach sight reading with some confidence [Music] so to begin we have this beautiful grand staff so that we can see how everything works together to create the notation system that we use um so let's take a look what do we have here we've got lines and spaces and we've got these two symbols which you are probably pretty familiar with as they are very synonymous with music in general so up here we've got the treble clef um so the treble clef is this really pretty sort of swirly design and it's also known as the g-clef and there's a really good reason for that which we'll talk about in a minute then down here we've got the bass clef and it is the bass clef because it's what's played lower on the piano so the bass clef usually connects to the left hand where the treble clef is usually for the right hand now this bass clef also got like an alternate name also known as the f clef which we will talk about later as well so to begin we're going to start with the treble clef so for now i want you to ignore this middle line and we're just going to talk about what we see from here up so we've got a line one two three four and five five lines and four spaces one two three four so each of those lines and spaces has a note name attached to it and remember when we talked earlier about this treble clef having a nickname g-clef well that's because this line that runs through the center of the treble clef kind of curl here is g so if you want a really easy note to identify it's this guy right here g so g is line two so when we move from a line to a space we're literally just stepping up one note name so if this is g this is important our musical alphabet runs from a to g and then repeats itself so after g we go to a after a if we move to the line note we end up on b after b we end up on c okay so notice how we're moving line space line space this is going to really help you with your sight reading after c we have d on the line after d we have e in the space and after in the space we have f and this can keep going but we're going to just stick within the general staff for now so second lineup is g it's the line that goes through the center of the treble clef's curl also known as the g clef for that reason and then we just go up our musical alphabet from there using every line and every space consecutively so that's really important to know now i'm going to take all these away for a second and we're going to look at sort of the bottom part of the treble clef so this line here super important this is so if we leave g here this is going to be like a landmark note this is another landmark note and you need to know this note like memorize it it could be the most important note because this is what's going to put everything to do a site reading into perspective for you and how everything connects so this here is called middle c so middle c is located in the center of your piano it's the c nearest the middle and this is what it looks like when it's notated in the treble clef so middle c is super important after c we have d okay so notice how we've drawn another line here normally you're not going to see all these lines in music but we've got them here just to make it easy but if any time you see a middle c there'll be a line drawn through it anytime you see a d above middle c it exists just below the first line of the treble clef after d we have e after e we go to the space for f and then look it we're right back on our landmark note of g so that's how this all works in terms of what the note names are now that's all fine and dandy but how do you memorize that so you can play notes really quickly i'm going to go back to landmark notes for a moment so i want you to notice that we've got c is a landmark note we can really easily identify that so what if my next note was here without having to think too hard how would you know so i like to think in terms of like space and skipping and stepping so if i were to step up one from c i'd have d but i'm moving from a line to a line and any time you move from one line to the next possible line you're skipping a note so my brain can automatically just go if that's c play and c on the piano i'm going to skip the next note it's going to put me to e so you want to get really quick at sort of skipping through your alphabet and your head and thinking forward and backward that's really going to help you with your sight reading so if i were to skip this note and put another note here i've got three line notes and i kind of call this a pattern jump up hi because the notes are skipping over we've got a c skip the note to get to e skip f to get to g that's a really quick and easy way to start sight reading without having to super like really concentrate on oh what has every single note if you can memorize this note then you can spatially acknowledge that the next note here skipping a note and then skipping a note so you can play that really easily on the piano it translates very well so a great way to get used to sight reading is by kind of skip counting and using your landmarks as sort of your grounding your your sort of base point your starting point so if i saw this i know that's c because it's really important to memorize and then i saw this the more you practice the more you can kind of count up you go okay well that's c so this is d this is e this is f so you'll get faster at that as you go and i find that's a really helpful way by basing my sight reading skills on the distance between the notes more so than actually going this is c d e f it really really helps to put it together so my landmark notes are c and g i find that those are the easiest to locate if you have you know learned music in a band class or in school somewhere along the way took piano lessons as a kid you're probably you know used to the word face in the spaces so this is f a c and e there might be an acronym for these ones every good boy deserves fudge you can absolutely rely on those but honestly i find landmarks to be way more efficient so i'd be interested to hear what your favorite approach is so let's take a look at the bass clef so we can see how this all connects so a lot of times beginners will go okay well this is f so that must mean that this is f well it's not and i'll show you why so this is a and i'm going to show you how this all adds up so we've got a b c d e f g a b and look at that guys i'm gonna borrow this this is middle c brings us back to middle c so everything is based on this middle c the middle c is like it's the deciding factor really it's how everything connects it's why it's so important so when you see just a bass clef with a note drawn here so you just kind of see this this would indicate that you're going to play middle c the c in the middle of your piano with your left hand now if you're just seeing the treble clef with the middle c below it you're going to be playing middle c with your right hand so same note it just depends on how it's shown so in the bass clef using the bass clef rules this can be middle c below c so think about your alphabet backwards this is b below b we've got a and then everything moves down from there g and then this f is another special landmark note because the bass clef's nickname look how this big dot goes around line one two three four that's the f note so f clef big dot goes between the two little dots brings us to f so those are some ways of looking at notes using sort of landmarks that are going to help to make it all make sense so that's how the notation works that's how note names work and how they all connect using the grand staff so yes it is a lot of information to take in you can use patterns in the bass clef just like you did in the treble clef so if i place a note here i'm memorizing that this is a you can go back to your acronyms too all cows eat grass or good boys deserve fudge always you can make up your own i'm going to tell you right now that this is c so if you know this is c and i place a note here you're going to skip count c skip the e if i place a note here we're going from a space to a line so to the very next possible spot this is e we're on f if i want to skip again skipping the space so if you jump up from f you get not a so using intervals memorizing a few spots that kind of feel or kind of organic and intuitive to you in terms of you know everybody kind of i think gravitates to certain places on on the staff middle c for me um i find that this is really easy to remember as as a i find this is really easy to remember is f and this is really easy to memorize is g and then from there it's just a matter of counting up and down your alphabet using these lines and spaces as your guideposts as your landmarks to move you up and down from where you're playing so the more you practice this the easier it gets look for patterns in your music it will really really help um comment below let me know how you feel about sight reading do you love sight reading or is it something that you struggle with so i hope you enjoyed this lesson and we will see you around bye [Music] you ...

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