STAFF LINES:-
When things are counted in music—staff lines, degrees of a scale, intervals, even the strings of a guitar they’re always counted from the bottom up.
It may feel a little silly, but Kinesthetic Learning—learning with your body— works. So that is what we are going to do now.
Take your hand—left or right—and put it up in front of your face with the palm toward you. Pretend your fingers are the lines of the staff. The spaces between your fingers are the spaces of the staff. Pinky is line one, ring finger line two, middle finger line three, index finger line four, and thumb line five. Between your pinky and ring finger is space one, etc., etc.
BAR LINES AND DOUBLE BAR LINES:-
The staff is divided into sections by vertical lines called Bar Lines.
There are two types of bar lines. The single bar line is a single thin line from the top line to the bottom line. Barlines simply divide up the staff into small sections which are easier to read. Think of bar lines as punctuation: you don’t hear them, they’re there to help with the reading.
The Double Bar Line marks the end of a section or the end of a song. It has a regular-sized line in addition to a thicker line close by to the right.
MEASURE:-
The area between two bar
lines is called a Measure or A Bar. Because some measures may have more notes in them than
others, the space between bar lines doesn’t have to be equal.
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MEANING: -
1.
BAR LINES:- The
staff is divided into sections by vertical lines called bar lines. There are
two types of bar lines. The single bar line is a single thin line from the top
line to the bottom line.
2.
DOUBLE BAR LINES:- The double bar line marks the
end of a section or the end of a song. It has a regular-sized line in addition to a thicker line close by to the right.
3.
MEASURE:- The area between two bar lines
is called a measure, or a bar. Because some measures may have more notes in them than others, the space between
bar lines doesn’t have to be equal.
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