yes and no,the violin has to change notes to SOUND the same as a Flute note,but if they play the same note they can keeping in mind that it isn't a extreamely low/high note. Hope it helps :)
Yes you can it is very hard to do but it is possible if you can find a good flute player ask them it is in a couple of songs that i have heard my student teacher preform
Yes, it is called multiphonics, and it is done by using certain fingerings. However, it can be very difficult to control.
Flutes sound a bit like when you blow over the top of a bottle but they are higher in pitch.
no you can only play one note at a time, like playinga recorder. if you tried to play a chord it would just change to a different note. :)
arpeggio It depends on what you're asking. A chord is formed when more than one note is played at the same time. Since the clarinet can only play one note at a time, it takes more than one clarinet playing at the same time to make a chord. When someone plays an arpeggio, they are playing multiple notes, but not at the same time.
hi. i actually play the flute and my brother plays the clarinet. your right, they sound quite horrid when both b's are played at the same time. they sound different because the flute and the clarinet are different keys. you will find that if the clarinet plays a c and the flute plays a b, they are the same notes :] hope i helped
When you play two notes at the same time your are playing a dyad, a type of chord only containing two notes.
Anton Stadler was a clarinettist in Mozart's time. He dedicated Clarinet Concerto in A for Stadler. The original composition was written to a special clarinet that could play lower notes than the modern clarinet in Bb.
A third is an interval - the distance between two notes. I would need to know which specific note names you were after. If you are asking about playing notes a third apart at the same time (harmonic intervals) - that is not possible since the clarinet is a melodic instrument, capable of playing only one note at a time.
By playing notes and seeing which one matches the beat
arpeggio It depends on what you're asking. A chord is formed when more than one note is played at the same time. Since the clarinet can only play one note at a time, it takes more than one clarinet playing at the same time to make a chord. When someone plays an arpeggio, they are playing multiple notes, but not at the same time.
hi. i actually play the flute and my brother plays the clarinet. your right, they sound quite horrid when both b's are played at the same time. they sound different because the flute and the clarinet are different keys. you will find that if the clarinet plays a c and the flute plays a b, they are the same notes :] hope i helped
When you play two notes at the same time your are playing a dyad, a type of chord only containing two notes.
Anton Stadler was a clarinettist in Mozart's time. He dedicated Clarinet Concerto in A for Stadler. The original composition was written to a special clarinet that could play lower notes than the modern clarinet in Bb.
A third is an interval - the distance between two notes. I would need to know which specific note names you were after. If you are asking about playing notes a third apart at the same time (harmonic intervals) - that is not possible since the clarinet is a melodic instrument, capable of playing only one note at a time.
You should clean your Clarinet every time you play in it.
I'm not sure how to play it exactly but if you go on you tube and look for someone playing this song on the piano and transposing the notes one at a time (this is very tedious) then you can get the melody. transposing the notes depends on the type of clarinet you have (ex B flat or E flat) if it's B flat then you count 3 keys up (when played on the keyboard the key being played included when you're counting the keys) this can take a very long time but it's an amazing song to play :)
When you play 3 or more notes together at the same time, in harmony, you get a chord.
They both use the same fingerings, and you might have to change you mouth position a little. I think it is not hard. I've done it and it just takes some getting used to. Make sure you've got enough support though. It takes a lot more air than the Clarinet does. its hard switching after playing the soprano clarinet for a long time. You also use more air playing the bass clarinet.
Only note by note. It's only instruments with keys or strings that can play the notes of a chord at the same time.
1.while in a song when notes come near the target you click the same butten and strum a the same time