The easiest way to play it is to start in first position with your first finger on the C string this is the starting D, then play as follows: D E F# G A B C# D E F# G A B C# D then play those notes in reverse for 2nd half of the scale.
You play every note including sharps/flats up to an octave higher than the note in which you started with.
one octive is a low C and a high C whch is the eastest(for me) and the cromatic scale is 000-open 123-press all of them-down low C 13 23 12 1 2 000 23 12 1 2 000- high C those are the fingerings for the scale hoped this helped :)
3 on a then 2 on g
To play a two-octave minor scale on the guitar, start by choosing a key (for example, A minor). Begin on the root note of the scale, which is typically played on the 5th fret of the low E string. Follow the minor scale pattern (whole step, half step, whole step, whole step, half step, whole step, whole step) while using the appropriate frets and strings to reach the second octave. Make sure to use proper finger placement and alternate picking for smooth transitions between notes.
1. Tonic 2. Super tonic 3. Mediant 4. Sub-dominant 5. Dominant 6. Sub-mediant 7. Leading note 8. Tonic
You play every note including sharps/flats up to an octave higher than the note in which you started with.
A two-octave scale contains a total of 24 notes. Each octave consists of 12 notes (including both the white and black keys in a piano context), so multiplying 12 notes by 2 octaves gives you 24 notes.
you play a c
one octive is a low C and a high C whch is the eastest(for me) and the cromatic scale is 000-open 123-press all of them-down low C 13 23 12 1 2 000 23 12 1 2 000- high C those are the fingerings for the scale hoped this helped :)
3 on a then 2 on g
To play a two-octave minor scale on the guitar, start by choosing a key (for example, A minor). Begin on the root note of the scale, which is typically played on the 5th fret of the low E string. Follow the minor scale pattern (whole step, half step, whole step, whole step, half step, whole step, whole step) while using the appropriate frets and strings to reach the second octave. Make sure to use proper finger placement and alternate picking for smooth transitions between notes.
1. Tonic 2. Super tonic 3. Mediant 4. Sub-dominant 5. Dominant 6. Sub-mediant 7. Leading note 8. Tonic
A violin's lowest note is the open G below middle C. The only under-chin stringed instrument that can play lower is the Viola, which plays the open C (1 octave below middle C) as it's lowest note. The only exception to this is the Electric violin/viola, which can have as many as 7 strings, the lowest being a B flat 2 octaves below middle C.
Guitar(no bow) and on the shoulder
1, open, 1-2, 1, open, 1, open, 1.
G major scale: (Bottom octave) G - 4 A - 2 B - 7 C - 6 D - 4 E - 2 F# - 5 G - 4 (Next Octave) G - 4 A - 2 B - 4 C - 3 D - 1 E - 2 F# - 3* G - 2* *Cheat in closer to 1st position than usual.
G major scale: (Bottom octave) G - 4 A - 2 B - 7 C - 6 D - 4 E - 2 F# - 5 G - 4 (Next Octave) G - 4 A - 2 B - 4 C - 3 D - 1 E - 2 F# - 3* G - 2* *Cheat in closer to 1st position than usual.