It changes because it depends if you do it soft or hard that is why it sounds different
On the violin the G string, which is the G under middle C, has the lowest frequency (196Hz).
String instruments are instruments that have strings on them, eg. Guitar or Violin.
The are many string instruments. Believe or not, piano is a string intruments. we also have the violin family. There is hundred string instruments. In the related links box below, I posted the wikipedia article.
Causes it to give a note of higher frequency
Here are the frequency, in Hertz, of the violin's four strings in order from lowest to highest: G: 196 Hz D: 293.66 Hz A: 440 Hz E: 659.25 Hz The G at 196 Hz is the lowest pitch on the violin (though a very rare and unconventional technique call subharmonics allows for a player to go below that). On each string the violin can theoretically attain as high a pitch as the violinist desires, but in practical terms, a pitch two octaves and a fifth above the fundamental (the open string with no fingers laid down). It is possible to go higher on the string, but it is very rarely, if ever, used, and it is extremely difficult to produce good tone at such extremes.
No, a violin is not a guitar. A violin is a string instrument that is played with a bow, while a guitar is a string instrument that is played by strumming or plucking the strings.
On the violin the G string, which is the G under middle C, has the lowest frequency (196Hz).
String instruments are instruments that have strings on them, eg. Guitar or Violin.
The are many string instruments. Believe or not, piano is a string intruments. we also have the violin family. There is hundred string instruments. In the related links box below, I posted the wikipedia article.
Causes it to give a note of higher frequency
Of a violin? It's an E5 with a frequency of 659,255 Hz.
Here are the frequency, in Hertz, of the violin's four strings in order from lowest to highest: G: 196 Hz D: 293.66 Hz A: 440 Hz E: 659.25 Hz The G at 196 Hz is the lowest pitch on the violin (though a very rare and unconventional technique call subharmonics allows for a player to go below that). On each string the violin can theoretically attain as high a pitch as the violinist desires, but in practical terms, a pitch two octaves and a fifth above the fundamental (the open string with no fingers laid down). It is possible to go higher on the string, but it is very rarely, if ever, used, and it is extremely difficult to produce good tone at such extremes.
In the string family is the guitar, electric bass, violin, viola, cello, double bass, banjo, mandolin, Ukulele, and harp.
the instrument should have strings like a guitar or a violin
10 violin viola cello bass guitar acoustic guitar electric guitar bass guitar piano harp
Viola, Violin, Bass, Cello.
If you mean frets to press the strings against - like the ones on the fingerboard of a guitar - there are no frets on a violin.