No. You have a bigger chance of breaking when playing high notes than your tuba.
there are a lot of notes in vampire blues, it is hard enough trying to play it
No, it does not.
To play high notes you have to tighten your lips and blow hard
By playing high notes, lip buzzing, and pedal tones.
use the high notes on the instrument. look at the music notes.
you just play the high notes and you could figure it out
As on any other stringed instrument, the treble strings on a piano are the string that play the high notes. As on any other stringed instrument, the treble strings on a piano are the string that play the high notes.
For the song called Galactic Episode the notes are B flat, C, D, F, E, G, high B flat and high A flat. These are the notes for Galactic Episode.
A standard oboe can play a 13-note range - from a low B to a high G.
On my version, you rest for six measures. Then you play a high C. You play a B, a high C, a B, and a high C (you play the last four notes as sixteenth notes and you hold the last C.) Then you play a B, a high C, a B, and a high C in sixteenth notes, a B and a G as an eighth note, a B as a quarter note, and a G and an F as an eighth note. You rest for one beat and then you play a B, a high C, a B, and a high C again as a sixteenth note, an F as a quarter note, and a D as an eighth note. Then you play E flat, E, E natural, and E as a sixteenth note, two F's as quarter notes, an E flat, a low C, and an F that's a half note. Then you play an E flat, an E, an E natural, and an E as a sixteenth notes, and then you play an F as a quarter note. You rest for five measures and then you play a B , a high C, a B, and a high C as a sixteenth note. Then you repeat the last sixteenth note I just said.
The French Horn really doesn't have a limit. The limit is just as high as you can play it.
You can play alot of notes! they range from like a really low g to really high c that is 2 lines above the staff. i know this b/c i play the trumpet and take lessons.