Magnetic Grand Staff
The Magnetic Grand Staff is a thin, black steel board, just over 16” long and 10” wide, with a red Grand Staff. The evolution of the treble and bass clefs is illustrated along the top and bottom. Included with the Magnetic Grand Staff are 9 round, white, easily-movable magnets (which represent the notes), 7 magnetic sharps, 7 magnetic flats, and 3 round, red magnets (the roots of chord inversions). With this product, your students can make intervals and scales, build triads, learn key signatures, make chord inversions, and change Major chords to minor, augmented and diminished. By placing the magnetic notes, sharps, and flats on the staff, your students learn by doing. Suddenly, music theory makes sense!
The Magnetic Grand Staff is a thin, black steel board, just over 16” long and 10” wide, with a red Grand Staff. The evolution of the treble and bass clefs is illustrated along the top and bottom. Included with the Magnetic Grand Staff are 9 round, white, easily-movable magnets (which represent the notes), 7 magnetic sharps, 7 magnetic flats, and 3 round, red magnets (the roots of chord inversions). With this product, your students can make intervals and scales, build triads, learn key signatures, make chord inversions, and change Major chords to minor, augmented and diminished. By placing the magnetic notes, sharps, and flats on the staff, your students learn by doing. Suddenly, music theory makes sense!
The Magnetic Grand Staff is a thin, black steel board, just over 16” long and 10” wide, with a red Grand Staff. The evolution of the treble and bass clefs is illustrated along the top and bottom. Included with the Magnetic Grand Staff are 9 round, white, easily-movable magnets (which represent the notes), 7 magnetic sharps, 7 magnetic flats, and 3 round, red magnets (the roots of chord inversions). With this product, your students can make intervals and scales, build triads, learn key signatures, make chord inversions, and change Major chords to minor, augmented and diminished. By placing the magnetic notes, sharps, and flats on the staff, your students learn by doing. Suddenly, music theory makes sense!