A guitar is a stringed instrument which consists of several (usually six) strings stretched across an acoustic chamber and a fretboard. "Guitar strings" are the strings used on Guitars, specialized strings are manufactured specifically for this purpose and there are many different brands and types.
heavy E is the thickest string
A is the second heaviest string
D is the 3rd string going down
G is the 4th string
B is the 2nd thinnest
high E is the thinnest
e B G D A E, e being the highest and E being the lowest.
The top (largest and thickest, called the lowest/bottom) is E. From top down to bottom, E A D G B E
E A D G B E
6 5 4 3 2 1
"Thickest" sting to the "Thinnest" string.
with strings
Yes, as far as the top 4 strings on a guitar go, is the same for a bass. EAD and G 5 string adds the b string., youβre in the neighborhood, especially if you already have knowledge of the guitar.
The notes are going to be the same, but getting them will be different! The strings are different notes then a guitar. If you play the baritone guitar, the strings are normally tuned to the same as the bottom 4 strings of the guitar, so that could be played the same way.There are 4 strings on the ukelele and six on the guitar so it would be different.
No, the strings of a guitar are tuned in fourths (read: E to A = 4 notes, A to D = 4 notes, etc.), until you get to "that darned B string". For every string on a guitar to be tuned in even fourths, the tuning would have to be as follows: EADGCF.
A site that teaches people how to play guitar will help one to learn the different strings of a guitar as well as which strings play which notes. Another option is to purchase a book from retailers like Hastings that will help with beginners at guitars.
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".
EADFBE
with strings
Yes, as far as the top 4 strings on a guitar go, is the same for a bass. EAD and G 5 string adds the b string., youβre in the neighborhood, especially if you already have knowledge of the guitar.
Thick strings with larger diameters vibrate slower than thinner strings.
The notes are going to be the same, but getting them will be different! The strings are different notes then a guitar. If you play the baritone guitar, the strings are normally tuned to the same as the bottom 4 strings of the guitar, so that could be played the same way.There are 4 strings on the ukelele and six on the guitar so it would be different.
E a d g b e
Open Strings E B G D A E
No, the strings of a guitar are tuned in fourths (read: E to A = 4 notes, A to D = 4 notes, etc.), until you get to "that darned B string". For every string on a guitar to be tuned in even fourths, the tuning would have to be as follows: EADGCF.
it depends you can tune it to lots off different ones
A site that teaches people how to play guitar will help one to learn the different strings of a guitar as well as which strings play which notes. Another option is to purchase a book from retailers like Hastings that will help with beginners at guitars.
This depends on the number of frets on the guitar. Because of the way the strings are tuned, if a guitar is in standard tuning it has 26 + the number of frets possible notes, so a 22 fret guitar would have 48 possible notes and a 24 fret guitar would have 50.