I have a 20 dollar gold piece, st. gaudens, it has a (C) with an (A) in the middle under the date, nothing on top of the date.......
I don't understand exactly which F you mean - but from one F to the next it is one octave.
An octave consists of the same note being sounded at different intervals one above or below the other, as in middle C and the C above or below it. A unison is the same note being sounded at the same place, as in a piano middle C and a guitar middle C being sounded simultaneously or two voices both singing middle C.
Throughout the whole keyboard, there are a few sets of "A's" and "C's" and so on. If you are starting from middle C and then the A above it, obviously A is higher. If you are starting from middle C and then going down for the A below it, the C is obviously higher.
The line through middle C is called a "ledger line." Ledger lines are used in musical notation to extend the staff for notes that fall above or below it. Middle C itself is positioned on the first ledger line below the treble staff or the first ledger line above the bass staff.
It depends which Ab you mean, the Ab note above middle C is approximately 415 Hertz.
Bb 2 octives below middle C
What do you mean? This question is vague. Do you mean the range of the instrument? It runs from the G below middle C up to however high you can reach on the high string, well over three E's above middle C. Or do you mean the notes of the strings of the violin? They are (low to high) G-D-A-E, again starting at the G below middle C, and working upward.
A set F below middle C refers to the notes F3-G3-A3-Bb3-C4, which are all consecutive notes below middle C (C4).
I don't understand exactly which F you mean - but from one F to the next it is one octave.
You need to draw a small supplementary line below the staff. Then the middle C will be right on top of it.
The SATB ranges for vocalists in a choir are as follows: Soprano: Highest vocal range, typically from middle C to high C. Alto: Lower female range, usually from G below middle C to E above middle C. Tenor: Higher male range, typically from A below middle C to high C. Bass: Lowest male range, usually from E below middle C to E above middle C.
A bass C is the note one octave below middle C.
Yes, a melody can be played on a piano key below middle C that includes the keyword "harmony."
Soprano - Middle C to top A Alto - Bottom G to top E Tenor - bottom C (octave below middle C) to F above middle C Bass - bottom E to Middle C
The closest G to Middle C is the G below it. The distance (or interval) between them is a perfect fourth.
In order, from lowest-pitched to highest-pitched, alto, mezzo-soprano, and soprano. The lowest note that an alto is expected to reach is F below middle C; a mezzo-soprano, A below middle C; and a soprano, middle C.
An octave consists of the same note being sounded at different intervals one above or below the other, as in middle C and the C above or below it. A unison is the same note being sounded at the same place, as in a piano middle C and a guitar middle C being sounded simultaneously or two voices both singing middle C.