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1.3: Octave Registers

  • Page ID
    117388
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    The note names used in music are ABCDEFG (known as the “musical alphabet”). After G, the note A returns and ABCDEFG occurs again and again. The distance from the first A to the second A is an octave (which means the notes are eight steps apart.)

    A B C D E F G A
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 (octave)

    The distance from any note to a note of the same name in the next register above or below is called an octave (abbreviated “8ve”).

    How can the piano keyboard have 88 notes when there are only seven note names? The musical alphabet repeats 7 times (with an extra ABC at the top), which means we have at least seven octave registers. (There are also five chromatic notes in each register, which we will learn about when we discuss Accidentals.) When learning about octave registers, we will focus on the note C for reasons that will soon become clear when we learn about the major scale.

    We use octave registers (C4, D5, etc.) to specify the exact register of a note. The note C4 is known as “middle C” and is an important reference point. See the keyboard in the example below.

    Picture of keyboard with C1 through C8 identified

    Note that the register number changes after the noteBB each time (BB4 is followed by CC5).

    In treble clef, middle CC is notated on the ledger line below the staff. In bass clef, middle CC is notated on the ledger line above the staff.

    treble-clef-middle-c.svg
    bass-clef-middle-c.svg
    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\): Middle C (C4) in treble clef and bass clef

    The other two commonly used clefs are alto clef and tenor clef. Each use a CC clef that, when placed on a staff, designate the placement of middle CC

    alto-clef-middle-c.svg
    tenor-clef-middle-c.svg
    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\): Middle C in alto clef and tenor clef

    The grand staff, which is a treble and bass clef joined together by a bracket, is how piano music is written.

    grand-staff-basic.svg

    Note that middle CC is always clearly notated in either the upper or lower staff and never floats between the two staves.


    This page titled 1.3: Octave Registers is shared under a GNU Free Documentation License 1.3 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Robert Hutchinson via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.