With violins, the highest string is E. And then fourth finger would put you up to B. But then you can shift, so there is no real highest note. You might get to a point by shifting to where you can't hear it anymore, but it is still a note. Although you could probably play two more octaves on it by shifting, notes that can still be heard.
If you mean all notes on a violin, here it is. Open G, A, B, C, open D, E, F, 2nd octave G, 2nd octave open A, 2nd octave B, 2nd octave C, 2nd octave D, 2nd octave open E, 2nd octave F, 3rd octave G, and 3rd octave A. These are just basic notes that you learn when you begin playing violin.
The notes go from bottom G (its G-string) all the way to high pitched B(on the tip of the finger board of its E String) The violin has 4 strings (G,D,A, and E)
It depends upon the user. If you are beginning you can use a app or whatever you want, to play the G,D, A, C. For each string. More experience users can tune to just a d.
If, by 'first note' you mean the lowest note, then the lowest note you can play on a correctly tuned violin is the open G string.
Violins are tuned to the A above middle C.
You can tune a violin, but you can't tune a tuna!
A violin is not a note. It is an instrument.
All the instruments are tune to the piano. Before an orchestral concert, the musicians will either tune to a note played on the violin by the concertmaster, or an oboist.
So you can tune your violin with the pegs.
you have to use A on the piano to tune your violin on A and put 4 fingers on E to tune E and so on and you cannot use a guitar tuner
You can tune a violin, but you can't tune a tuna!
A violin is not a note. It is an instrument.
All the instruments are tune to the piano. Before an orchestral concert, the musicians will either tune to a note played on the violin by the concertmaster, or an oboist.
So you can tune your violin with the pegs.
No. A string half as long as a violin string set vibrating will produce a note one octave higher. That is exactly how the violin is played. When the violinist moves his hand up and down the fingerboard, he is literally shortening the strings making the notes higher or lengthening them to make them lower. The lowest note a violin can reach is the open G string. That is the G below middle C. Pressing down on that string raises the pitch. When you tune your violin, you tune your A string first and then tune your other strings to that string.
you have to use A on the piano to tune your violin on A and put 4 fingers on E to tune E and so on and you cannot use a guitar tuner
Turn the peg to tighten the string to the proper note. If you don't know how to tune ask your teacher. If you don't have a teacher, get one.
you start with the A string and follow to the other strings
yea
The strings start to go out of tune.
Yes. It is not that different. Easier to do with low g.
For violin, whenever you play a certain note, it resonates the wood and it becomes part of the wood's 'memory' of a sort. More the note is played, the wood starts to produce finer sounds. I used to play a French violin from 1876 and the sound is very exquisite. It has a very subtle fine quality, almost as though the notes are caressing you, that you can't find in new instruments.