Pressing on the finger board plays higher notes per tape.
the notes are easy just google search it
You pull a bow across the strings, which make different notes. The left hand is used to "stop" the string for even more notes.
Plain answer: Yes. If, desired, explanation: If by "cello music notes" you mean "bass clef notes" then certainly, a viola can play those. A cello can also play the notes which are usually played by viola, called alto clef notes. Since viola and cello have the same intervals and same note range, they can play each other's music as long as the musician can read both clefs.
Here are the notes: adadadaddgdgdgfefedddddd
a, d, g, and c
A cello is just like a violin except the fact that it has lower notes. It only is bigger
The Cello or the Bass.
You can use fingerings (1, 3, and 4) or you can tune the strings to lower notes.
Because it has strings, and because it is closely related to the violin and the viola, of which the cello can play the lowest notes, and the violin the highest.
I studied the cello notes and where they go, but I don't know that everyone can just play both, sometimes its hard.
There are 20 notes including open strings T h a n k s !
Well, there's no real limit to notes, because you can shift. But for the basic notes, there are 20.