5Apr/124
when your reading music, and see a upside down note, what does that mean? and how do you play it?
jessicer asked:
ok, so im reading some music and there is upside down notes!
i have no idea what this means!
how do i play it?
what does it mean?
and whats the difference between a bass clef and a treble clef?
many thanks x
Learn How to Read Music Notes
ok, so im reading some music and there is upside down notes!
i have no idea what this means!
how do i play it?
what does it mean?
and whats the difference between a bass clef and a treble clef?
many thanks x
Learn How to Read Music Notes

October 31st, 2009 - 12:24
music readinghttp://hubpages.com/hub/How-To-Read-Music
i don”t know what that means either but…i”m sure you have to play it with your heart and your spirit
October 31st, 2009 - 15:24
Music Theory for Beginners
If by ‘upside down notes’ you mean the tail is pointing down/up (as in crochets and quavers), that makes no difference.The actual note is determined by its position on the lines or spaces. Play them as you usually would.
Bass clef – notes below middle C. Ascending Lines – GBDFA. Ascending Spaces – ACEG.
Treble clef – notes above middle C. Ascending Lines – EGBDF. Ascending Spaces – FACE.
November 1st, 2009 - 20:45
Music Reading
In basic terms the note is not upside down it is because it is near the bottom of the lines on which the music is written. you will see that the tail of the note points up when the note is on the top half and the tail goes down when it is near the bottom.
Treble clef is the higher notes (normally) and is played with the right hand and the bass clef is the lower or bass notes normally played with the left hand
November 4th, 2009 - 17:32
music readinghttp://hubpages.com/hub/How-To-Read-Music
The tails of the notes are placed for convenience. It doesn’t matter which way they’re going, it’s the placement of the note on the staff that matters. You play them the same way whether the tail is going up or down.
The bass clef is one space down for the same notes as in treble clef. On a piano, the bass notes are played with the left hand, the treble notes are played with the right hand. For band and symphony instruments, the bass notes are played by the lower register instruments – tuba, bass viol, etc.