A ledger line is a short line used in musical notation to write notes which would otherwise be too high or too low to put on any of the five lines on the staff. A short line (slightly longer than the note) is drawn parallel to the lines on the staff, and the note head is placed on that line or in the space below or above it.
Ledger lines are found on the stave, either above or below the main five lines. The smaller ledger lines work the same way as the main lines and spaces in terms of note sequence. Once you have become familiar with the main notes, the other notes written above and below the stave will be easy to recognise!
A ledger line is a short line used to write notes which would otherwise be too high or too low for the staff.A short line (slightly longer than the note) is drawn parallel to the lines on the staff, and the note head is placed on that line or in the space below or above it. Notes more than two or three leger lines below the treble clef stave or two or three leger lines above the bass clef.
Reading ledger line notes seems like an overwhelming task. Who's idea was it to attach tiny little lines with notes to the music staff anyways? I'm not sure I can answer that question, but I do know that we need more notes to create music than what can be held on the staff alone. The five lines and four spaces of the music staff simply can't hold them all.
The Free Ledger Paper Template is a useful template you can use right away. For the musicians: The Music Ledger Paper Template is a nice one that shows the ledger lines for both the treble clef and the bass clef, with the symbols already printed in. If you want a fully blank music ledger, the Blank Ledger Line Paper Template is useful.