well, if your sheet music says 'four' in it then you find out what key its in and go four steps up in that scale, and if it says 'four' on the capo, you can just put it any were. thanks man, 10yearguitarplayer
Yes- that means put a capo on the second fret- otherwise you will be playing it in the wrong key
its an object your put on a guitar to change the tuning. for example if someone says "to play this piece you need capo 4". search "capo" on google for more info
Put the capo on the second fret and use the "C" chord configuration - this is equivalent to a "D" with no capo.
you can either put the capo on the 10th fret, or tune the guitar to drop d
The capo needs to go in 3rd fret to get the key of C.
D chord
Yes you can. So long as the capo will physically fit on the neck.
It is not bad for the guitar, but the capo will be kind of useless as it won't be fretting the strings properly.
Not your answer
It's called a sliding capo.
it would be on the 3rd fret. i think.
When a capo is used it does not affect anything other than its open tuning. The bass not remains the same with or without it.