cfgv bb
Standard weight is .2g. Cheap guns often work best with .12g, while people tend to use heavier bb's such as .23g with high end guns for accuracy. Snipers will sometimes use up to .4g bb's, but usually stick to between .25g and .3g bb's. Heavier bb's result in greater accuracy, but cause a decrease in muzzle velocity.
.40 grams
No no normally.
A 6mm BB gun pellet will weigh about 0.20g ----
Bb. It is really easy to find which note is a fifth down by playing the major triad with the top not as F. That triad is Bb, D, F, so Bb is a fifth below F.
C major triad : C - E - GG major triad : G - B - DD major triad : D - F# - AA major triad: A - C# - EE major triad : E - G# - BB major triad : B - D# - FC# major triad: C# - E# - G#F# major triad : F# - A# - C#Cb major triad : Cb - Eb - GGb major triad : Gb - Bb - DbDb major triad : Db - F - AbAb major triad : Ab - C - EbEb major triad : Eb - G - BbBb major triad : Bb - D - FF major triad : F - A - CA natural minor triad : A - C - EE natural minor triad : E - G - BB natural minor triad : B - D - F#F# natural minor triad : F# - A - C#C# natural minor triad : C# - E - G#A# natural minor triad : A# - C# - EG# natural minor triad : G# - B - D#D# natural minor triad : D# - F# - A#Eb natural minor triad : Eb - Gb - BbAb natural minor triad : Ab - C -EbBb natural minor triad : Bb - Db - FD natural minor triad : D - F - AG natural minor triad : G - Bb - DC natural minor triad : C - Eb - GF natural minor triad : F - Ab - C
E flat augmented raises the Bb to B natural.
One of the notes in a chord. For a three-note chord (major, minor, diminished, augmented), the root is the first chord tone, the major or minor third is the "third" chord tone, and the perfect, diminished, or augmented fifth is the "fifth" chord tone. for chords of higher degree than five, the additional notes are all chord tones as well. Here is a list of the chord tones of common chords in C: C - C E G Cmin - C Eb G Cdim - C Eb Gb C+ - C E G# Csus4 - C F G C7 - C E G Bb CMaj7 - C E G B Cmin7 - C Eb G Bb C9 - C E G Bb D C11 - C E G Bb D F CMaj13 - C E G B D F A (All of the notes of the C major scale!) C13 - C E G Bb D F A
The concert pitches are B, D, and F#. Since the trumpet is a Bb instrument, the notes are C#, E, and G#.
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The Italian chord is a dominant seventh chord without the fifth of the chord. C E Bb
It simply means only play the root and the fifth of the chord, so in this case, Bb and F, no D (3rd) or a variation of the A (7th) in it
For the the common Bb clarinet:F A C.An arpeggio consists of the first, third, fifth, notes of a scale, usually played ascending and then descending. The three notes of an arpeggio also make up a major triad. "Concert" means in the key of C, but the clarinet is in Bb, so first convert Eb in C to its counterpart in Bb, which is F.The scale name is F Major, and the notes in the scale: F, G, A, Bb, C, D, E, . Taking the first, third, and fifth notes, it becomes: F, A, C. When playing this arpeggio, a musician would usually play (ascending) F, A, C, F, (descending) C, A, F.
Yes, you can either hold the Bb trigger and play it or transpose the music up a forth or down a fifth.
Chords don't have "tonic notes". Scales do. The tonic note of the G major scale is G (in fact, the tonic note of the X major/minor scale will always be X). Chords do have roots, but that's equally boring: the root of the G major chord is G.
in a Bb x bb cross?