You can play more than one note at a time to make one different note.
i play a brass instrument and yes one note at a time which can be slurred into another note
The trumpet is a one-note instrument. You can only play one note at a time. Therefore, it is not possible to play a chord, per se, because that indicates playing more than one note at the same time. Strings and some percussion instruments can play two or more notes at once.
A cello is very much like a 'large violin'Violins play chords so yes, cellos can obviously play chords!
One note at a time
A half note is a length of time, which is determined by the time signature and tempo of a piece. In order to play one, just continue blowing through the trumpet for the appropriate amount of time.
A chord consists of multiple notes played at one time. Woodwind and brass can only play one note at a time.
You can't play a chord on one Sax. You can play the notes of the chord, but a single sax cannot play more than one note. A chord is when more than one note is played at the same time.
No. A trumpet can only play one note at a time, while a chord by definition is made of at least three notes.
. One beat. [[... Not quite. That is only true if the time signature has a 4 in the lower half. This means the beat is a quarter note. If your signature is 7/8 (for example) this means that there are 7 beats per measure and the eighth note gets the beat. In a given time signature and tempo, it would take the same amount of time to play two eighth notes as it would to play one quarter note.]]
You can only finger one note at a time on the flute, so there are no chords. You can play a duet, though.
It is a staccato mark. It means to play the note short, generally one half of its normal value. So if you have a quarter note in 4/4 time with a dot under it, you play it about 1/2 beat, or in other words, like an eigth note.