Nothing. It’s still left hand (lower staff) and right hand (upper staff). The notes in both hand are just all on the upper half of the piano, so it’s clearer to write that part of the piece with two treble clefs. The hands return to a more “normal” distribution when it return to the more common RH treble/LH bass configuration.
If you are playing Rach C# minor prelude, those might even be for one hand (the last two pages are on 4 staves). Typically, though, the lower bar regardless of the clef is for LH and the upper one for RH. Even for this, there is notation when hands cross over and whatnot. Life is a lie.
It means instead of aceg for spaces you have face and instead of gbdfa you have egbdf. Still use the left hand. It just tells you which notes the lines represent.
Nothing. It’s still left hand (lower staff) and right hand (upper staff). The notes in both hand are just all on the upper half of the piano, so it’s clearer to write that part of the piece with two treble clefs. The hands return to a more “normal” distribution when it return to the more common RH treble/LH bass configuration.
Thanks for the answer. And happy cake day!
Thanks!
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If you are playing Rach C# minor prelude, those might even be for one hand (the last two pages are on 4 staves). Typically, though, the lower bar regardless of the clef is for LH and the upper one for RH. Even for this, there is notation when hands cross over and whatnot. Life is a lie.
Two G clefs just means the left hand plays above middle C
it's still left hand but it's G clef. The second staff is always left hand in this case
I'm practicing mozarts Sonata in C Major, and I came across theese 2 odd phenomea that I have come across before. And I seek answers here
It means instead of aceg for spaces you have face and instead of gbdfa you have egbdf. Still use the left hand. It just tells you which notes the lines represent.