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What notes, anything in the key of A. A B C# D E F# G# A.
An octave is a stepping stone, of sorts. On a viola, their are multiple notes that play 'a'. On the G String, first finger is 'low a' On the A string, open is 'a' They are separated by an octave. An octave is the distance between two of the same notes. To play a two octave scale, start with first finger D on the C String and end with Third finger D on the A string. The Viola has four strings: A, D, G, C. C is the lowest.
The notes in a B5 chord would eliminate the the D sharp note and just play the B and the F sharp
Because of the repetition of notes that are written here, it would be easier if one researched how to play this song and many others online.
Yes. Accordion music is like piano music because it uses both the treble and the bass clef. Usually, you play the notes in the treble clef with the right hand and the notes in the bass clef with the left hand.
The members of the string family, from the highest to the lowest, are the violin, the viola, cello and bass. Without the strings you would no longer have an orchestra, you would have a band, The string family, as a unit, can play the very highest notes and the very lowest.
A bugle (usually) doesn't have valves, while a cornet almost always does. This means a cornet can play notes that are not possible on the bugle, but the instruments are similar enough that someone who can play a cornet can also play a bugle (or just mimic one on a cornet by not using the valves).
If the bugle is in the normal key of B-flat, then the notes played by the bugle correspond to the open notes of the trumpet - no valves pressed down at all. If the bugle is in a different key than the trumpet, you will need to transpose the bugle notes into the key of the trumpet to find which notes to play on the trumpet. After you have done the transposition, it should be the case that the same valve combination can be used for all the bugle notes in that key.
That would be a bugle. Bugles actually only play about four notes; all bugle calls are based on them.
That would be a bugle. Bugles actually only play about four notes; all bugle calls are based on them.
I think a very high G. But it can vary.
Because it has strings, and because it is closely related to the violin and the viola, of which the cello can play the lowest notes, and the violin the highest.
im not sure about other instruments, but i play piano and i know for sure that it has treble clefs. the lowest note is A and the highest note is C. it's different for different pianos. But this is for a grand piano.
Do you mean what notes with sharps can you play on the violin? You can play any note including the chromatics (sharps and flats) from its lowest pitch (G) to its highest limit (conventionally B). For contemporary music with unusual techniques, you can play all of the quarter tones, or notes between the notes of a chromatic scale.
A bugle is essentially a trumpet type instrument without the valves to change pitch. Because of that, it can play a series of partials going up. The notes a bugle is capable of playing get closer the higher register you play, so you could-theoretically-play every not, but only several octaves up.
Lowest note on the harp is C1, the lowest C on the piano. The highest note is G7, the highest G on the piano.
Double Bass