The easy way is to apply a capo at one of the frets; each fret represents a half-tone, so for every fret above the capo you have gone up a half tone. Another way is simply to tune the guitar up. Which you do depends on your need.
1. Twist the twisty thing
2. Play a higher note
3. Make the note higher
By tightening the string using the machine head (one of the knobs at the head of the guitar) causing the string to vibrate quicker thus making the pitch higher
Loosen the strings!:@
turn the tuning peg.....
The Longer tube is the Lower pitched note and the Smaller lengthed one is the Higher Pitched note. The same with any wind instrament.
The fourth and the twelfth fret on a guitar are used for the same reasons that the other frets are used to make notes. The higher the number of the fret the higher the note is. Each fret represents a half step up from the previous note.
When a capo is used on a guitar, it makes the overall pitch of the guitar higher as it effectively shortens the strings, meaning the note that is played has a higher pitch.
The neck is where the fretboard is located. The closer to the body a string is pressed, the higher the pitch of the note.
You may be reffering to a tuner, as in a part of the guitar that changes the note that string plays by tightening it or loosening it, or a tuner as in a small device which tells you what note is sounding from your guitar. the latter allows you to make sure that your gutar is in correct tune by telling you exactly what note each string is playing so you can adjust it to the right pitch.
The Longer tube is the Lower pitched note and the Smaller lengthed one is the Higher Pitched note. The same with any wind instrament.
Straight forward answer- yes
The fourth and the twelfth fret on a guitar are used for the same reasons that the other frets are used to make notes. The higher the number of the fret the higher the note is. Each fret represents a half step up from the previous note.
When a capo is used on a guitar, it makes the overall pitch of the guitar higher as it effectively shortens the strings, meaning the note that is played has a higher pitch.
in experience I'd say they just break when you try to put them in higher tunings, not sure about making the note higher. I bought a set of Yngwie Malmsteen signature strings the first time, stringed the guitar up , stretched the strings and so I clipped off the strings and the highest note the high E would go into was C. Shortening the string just makes it impossible to reach higher tunings as far as I know, almost smashed a 300$ guitar I owned .. but when that happened it was a long day of fixing guitars.
The neck is where the fretboard is located. The closer to the body a string is pressed, the higher the pitch of the note.
A song note chart, that people make to put on a hacked Guitar Hero.
Low
it changes the pitch, tighter strings produces higher pitch..
The guitar makes sound when you pluck a string. The string vibrates down to the base of the guitar and travels in the hole, coming out as a sound we call a note.
By pressing down the string at some point on the neck (fretboard) so that the length of the string that vibrates becomes shorter, therefore producing a higher pitched note.
Stretch it tighter - the higher the tension on a drum head, the higher a percussive note it will sound.