on what because if its on the piano its a D
On the piano, it is a D, or C#.
The note at the end of the song is written as high E (the E above high C, which is two octaves above middle C), however it is sometimes lowered to high D, or high D flat, due to the possible strain of singing such a high note repeatedly.
I Dunno :L Edit: The highest note possible is an A above high C; or 4 ledger lines above the staff. In most of the common repetoire, however, oboes rarely play anything above the D above the staff.
"High" is a relative term when it comes to any brass instrument. In my experience, the normal range for a high school player was any note up to the first G above the staff (G5).Keeping differences in players in mind, it was also my experience that some players struggled to play a top-space E, while others managed the C above the staff seemingly effortlessly.
The last note on a piano is an A.
The highest note a piccolo can play is a high C. It would be 4 octaves above middle C on the piano.
The note at the end of the song is written as high E (the E above high C, which is two octaves above middle C), however it is sometimes lowered to high D, or high D flat, due to the possible strain of singing such a high note repeatedly.
I Dunno :L Edit: The highest note possible is an A above high C; or 4 ledger lines above the staff. In most of the common repetoire, however, oboes rarely play anything above the D above the staff.
C#/Db is a half step above C.
"High" is a relative term when it comes to any brass instrument. In my experience, the normal range for a high school player was any note up to the first G above the staff (G5).Keeping differences in players in mind, it was also my experience that some players struggled to play a top-space E, while others managed the C above the staff seemingly effortlessly.
c
G above muiddle C is open valve (none pressed) and tighter lip for high note
The last note on a piano is an A.
The highest note a piccolo can play is a high C. It would be 4 octaves above middle C on the piano.
a above the middle C
B
Her highest note if F above high C, but I'm not sure about her lowest.
On my version, you rest for six measures. Then you play a high C. You play a B, a high C, a B, and a high C (you play the last four notes as sixteenth notes and you hold the last C.) Then you play a B, a high C, a B, and a high C in sixteenth notes, a B and a G as an eighth note, a B as a quarter note, and a G and an F as an eighth note. You rest for one beat and then you play a B, a high C, a B, and a high C again as a sixteenth note, an F as a quarter note, and a D as an eighth note. Then you play E flat, E, E natural, and E as a sixteenth note, two F's as quarter notes, an E flat, a low C, and an F that's a half note. Then you play an E flat, an E, an E natural, and an E as a sixteenth notes, and then you play an F as a quarter note. You rest for five measures and then you play a B , a high C, a B, and a high C as a sixteenth note. Then you repeat the last sixteenth note I just said.