the strings on a guitar are
E 1st
A2nd
D3RD
G4TH
B5TH
E6TH
If you are a beginner here is a saying that helped me
E- EDDY
A-ATE
D-DYNAMYTE
G-GOOD
B-BYE
E-EDDY
ok so i hope i helped with that part now the actual notes are
A
B5 wich is b flat nd is the way i write it but it actually Bb
B
C
C#
D
Eb
E
F
F#
G
G#
I hoped i helped for the 12 note scale and oh and #=sharp and b is flat. and every note has a # or b except for B,C AND E,F.
so the 12 note scale starts on the 1st frett on the E strings and is and F
2nd frett F#
3RD FRETT G
4TH FRETT G#
5TH FRETT A
6TH FRETT Bb
7TH FRETT B
8TH FRETT C
9TH FRETT C#
10TH FRETT D
11TH FRETT Eb
12th frett E
THEN IT REPAETS FROM WHAT WE STARTED WITH AN F NOTE ON THE 1ST FRETT THEN 13 - 24 (DEPENDING ON YOUR GUITAR) REPEATS THE NOTES ALL OVER AGAIN.
AND THERE YOU GO THOSE ARE ALL THE NOTES SO IF YOU MEMORIZE THOSE YOU KNOW ALL THE NOTES ON THE GUITAR.
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.
The best way to get those E notes is to use a piano. Another way, just as good, is to use another tuned guitar.
From thin to thick it goes EBGDAE and a way to remember it would be Easter Bunnies Go Dancing At Easter
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.
i think many are the same and tuned but some lower notes are thicker so they can go lower and higher ones are thinner and then just tunned to secific notes
The strings on a guitar are typically tuned to the notes E, A, D, G, B, and E from low to high.
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".
Guitar strings are typically tuned to the notes E, A, D, G, B, and E, starting from the lowest string to the highest string.
The notes of the open strings on a standard-tuned guitar, in the order EBGDAE, are E, B, G, D, A, and 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.
Guitar strings are typically tuned to the notes E, A, D, G, B, and E from the lowest to the highest string.
The 6 string guitar string notes are E, A, D, G, B, and E. They are typically tuned to EADGBE from the lowest to the highest string.
Guitar strings are typically tuned to the notes E, A, D, G, B, and E from lowest to highest pitch.
The standard strings on a guitar are tuned to the notes E, A, D, G, B, and E. The thickest string is tuned to E, followed by A, D, G, B, and the thinnest string is also tuned to E.
The standard tuning notes for a guitar are EADGBE, starting from the lowest string to the highest. To ensure your guitar is properly tuned, you can use a tuner device or app, tune by ear using a reference pitch, or use harmonics to check the tuning accuracy.
it depends you can tune it to lots off different ones
The standard tuning for a guitar is EADGBE, with the strings tuned to the notes E, A, D, G, B, and E from the lowest to the highest string.