Page 63 - Year 8 Knowledge Organiser
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Music: 5 of 5                         Personal Development: Mental Health & Well-Being: 1 of 1





 Reading sheet music: sheet music looks complicated but just like the notes on the piano, it follows a
 pattern based on the first seven letters of the alphabet. Once we understand this, sheet music

 becomes easier to read.

 Sheet music looks like a row of five lines with dots placed on it. The dots are either directly on top of

 the lines, or they are in the space in between the line.



 One of the easiest ways to remember where the notes are is to use the rhymes shown below. The

 first rhyme tells us the notes that are on the lines (E, G, B, D and F) and the second rhyme tells us
 the notes that are in the spaces (FACE in the space).












 Some people find it easier to learn just one note, and then using that to work out the rest by

 following the alphabet:











 If we remember that E is the bottom note on the stave, then we know that the space above it must

 be F, because F follows E in the alphabet. The note above this must be G, because G follows F.
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