They are in the same key--they are both concert pitched instruments (in Concert C Major.) This means that a Note on Violin is the same note played on the piano. For example, the Clarinet is a concert B-flat pitched instrument, and because the Piano is Concert C pitched, if you played a C on the piano, it wouldn't be the same not as a C on the clarinet. Hope this helps :)
There are twelve members of the western flute family, smallest first. Piccolo, treble flute, Soprano, Concert, Flute d'amour, Alto, Bass. Contra alto, Contrabass, Subcontrabass, Double contrabass and Hyperbass flutes
Play the violin, I do. Flute is just blowing and pressing. In violin there's all sorts of techniques. Arco, pizzacato, things like that. You'll love violin.
Piano, violin, flute
Violin, piccolo, Flute, Oboe, English horn, all clarinets, Trumpet, horn (usually), xylophone, glockenspiel.
The note A-natural sounds different on a tuning fork, a violin, and a flute because of the relative amplitudes of harmonics.
it depends on if you want to feature the flute then the flute will be the lead or the melody the violin would be the harmony but the cello will always be bass if it was featuring the violin then the violin would be melody the flute will be harmony and the cello still will be bass
Flute
There are twelve members of the western flute family, smallest first. Piccolo, treble flute, Soprano, Concert, Flute d'amour, Alto, Bass. Contra alto, Contrabass, Subcontrabass, Double contrabass and Hyperbass flutes
grand piano, bass drum, flute, marracas, guitar, violin, clarinet
piano, violin,organ,Flute
Play the violin, I do. Flute is just blowing and pressing. In violin there's all sorts of techniques. Arco, pizzacato, things like that. You'll love violin.
A soprano voice is the highest pitch in opera music. It is normally considered to be a voice that ranges from around middle C to a high A, or from middle C and about two octaves above that pitch.It is mostly a reference in opera music to the highest women performers.oh yes it is!!
The violin and the Flute.
The violin and the flute.
Piano, violin, flute
Neither. If I had to choose though, I'd say Flute.
Yes, it is. The "A" on a flute is the same as the "A" on a piano, unlike the (common, soprano) clarinet which in the key of "B flat".