The capo needs to go in 3rd fret to get the key of C.
it would be on the 3rd fret. i think.
you can either put the capo on the 10th fret, or tune the guitar to drop d
By putting the capo on the second fret and playing a C chord, will create the chord D sound. By playing Am you will get Bm, and by playing Dm you will get Em.
An A chord can be played several different ways on the guitar, but the most common A chord is the open A. To play this chord, simply bar your first finger across the second fret of the second, third, and fourth strings. When strumming this chord, be sure not to strum the sixth string.
The capo needs to go in 3rd fret to get the key of C.
it would be on the 3rd fret. i think.
this is the real way to play this song. i just figured it out. Chords = begining part c c f g c c f g c c f g c c (repeat) f g... then f f Am g f f Am g f f Am g f f d d g g g then back to c c f g c c for ukulele of course. (that d chord is the one where you bar 1,2 and 3 second fret.) ( Am is 1st string 2nd fret.) (c is 4th string 3rd fret) g is 2nd string 2nd fret, 3rd string 3rd fret, and 4th string 2nd fret f is 1st string 2nd fret, 3rd string 1st fret
Since the song is in F, (capo 5th fret C) the harmonica is also F.
you can either put the capo on the 10th fret, or tune the guitar to drop d
By putting the capo on the second fret and playing a C chord, will create the chord D sound. By playing Am you will get Bm, and by playing Dm you will get Em.
It depends if you want low or high. A low C is on 5th string, 2nd closest to your face, 3rd fret. A high C is on 2nd string, 2nd closest to your legs, on 1st fret.
That is the note "C".
On the acoustic guitar, the note "c" can be in a plethora of places all along the fret board. One place is on the first fret, second string from the bottom (B string). There is a simple way to find this out. The second string from the bottom is the B string when you play it open. So what comes after B? There is no B sharp, so C comes after B. That means that the first fret of the second string is a C when you press it down. If you go on the second fret of the B string, you are playing a C sharp. The third fret is a D and so on. Apply this concept to all of the other strings and you can find out where all the C notes are.
For guitar it has a Capo on the 2nd fret. Hope this helps =).
The fourth and twelfth fret of a guitar are used to make the key of the notes change. The different frets change the notes by adding a half step up or down in conjunction with the fret.
A 21 fret guitar can play from E2 to C#6. A 24 fret guitar can play from E3 to E6.