strings.
In addition to strings, there are a number of other similarities shared by the guitar and piano. Both are polychromatic instruments, meaning that more than one note can be played at the same time. Also, both use a sounding board, often spruce, to amplify the sound, and both use tuning pegs to set the pitch of each string. Also, both are capable of a very wide range of octaves.
Yes and no.
Piano and Guitar notes can be written on sheet music as notes on the staff, but guitar notes are written differently as well. These are called tabs. Tabs are usually a demostarion of a chord for guitar and it can also be used to write notes on for guitar.
Guitar is a concert C instrument. Clarinet is usually a concert Bb or concert Eb instrument. If you play a C on the guitar, you have to play a D on the Bb clarinet and an A on the Eb clarinet to have all the notes to be unison.
Sort of. With the piano, one can play as many notes as they want, but the placement of strings on a guitar makes it sometimes impossible to play the chord with the the notes appearing in the same amount of times in the chord and at the same placement. For example, the G major chord on piano is G B D, but on the guitar it would be G B D G B G. It still contains the same types of notes, just a different quantity and order. Sometimes, notes need to be subtracted from chords on a guitar because of string organization. For example, a 9th chord has 5 notes, but the guitar can only play four different notes at a time. The piano has all five. So, a piano Gmaj9 would look like this: G B D F A while a guitar Gmaj9 would look like this: G B F A.
yes, each note on each (properly tuned) instrument has the same fundamental frequency. Some stupid instruments have the note names transposed though, to make life a little harder for composers (or to restrict work for the better ones).
Instruments do not sound the same though, as you probably have heard.
The short answer: No, it is not.
Exceptions:
There is a difference between piano notes and guitar notes. These notes are played on very different instruments producing very different sounds.
yes
the clarinet
Well really it should be the same notes but is it designed diffrently than the ones in 2012
No, a bass clarinet and regualr clarinet are not the same. A bass clarinet is much bgger and produces lower notes than a regular clarinet. However, they do have the same fingerings for a note. I play the bass clarinet and the reular clarinet play the same notes and t he fingering are the same but the bass is alot lower. They have there own music. They are similar in ways and different in others.
what are the notes for take it off on the clarinet
A clarinet makes many notes, low and high. too many to count...
you would just use the same notes as the piano. piano notes and clarinet notes are the exact same.
the clarinet
Bass guitar strings are tuned to the same notes as the thickest four strings of an electric guitar, but they are tuned one octave lower. So, the same notes, but one octave "deeper".
The clarinet has 24 notes
Well really it should be the same notes but is it designed diffrently than the ones in 2012
No, a bass clarinet and regualr clarinet are not the same. A bass clarinet is much bgger and produces lower notes than a regular clarinet. However, they do have the same fingerings for a note. I play the bass clarinet and the reular clarinet play the same notes and t he fingering are the same but the bass is alot lower. They have there own music. They are similar in ways and different in others.
yes because they are both woodwinds and use about the same notes
the trumpet trust me im in band n it is mostly the same notes
what are the notes for take it off on the clarinet
wind is the answer
A clarinet makes many notes, low and high. too many to count...
Same way you get to Carnegie Hall: Practice, practice, practice.