Open "G" First Finger "A" Second Finger "B" Third Finger "B sharp" Fourth Finger "C"
the G note is above the F note. but triple high G has 3 lines below it and it's a squeal not a sound
A tonic is the root note of a musical piece. This note is what names the key that the song is in. So, if a minuet is written in the key of G, it's tonic note is G and its tonic chord is G major.
It depends on whether you are playing High G or Low G. Great Highland bagpipes range from Low G to High A. From low G, play a G then a D gracenote on the low G melody note. For High G play a High G gracenote on the melody note F followed by the melody note G
No. On a certain note with both a sharp and flat, (G, for example) they are the same distance from G, but going in diferent directions. G sharp raises the note by one half step while G flat lowers the note by one half step. However, it is possible for a sharp note to mean the same note as a flat note. For example, G sharp is the same note as A flat. This is called being enharmonic.
This means a normal note [This means a low note] {This means a high note} Each dot is how many beats you hold the note G G G G G G G G B B B D G D B B D A G E E E E D D C C [A G] G G D E D B B B D G D B B BD A G E E E D D C E E D D C B {B} E G A {B B} G G {D C B} A A G A F G D {B B B} A A G A G G E D {B B B} A A A A G {B} D {B B B} A A G A G G E {B B} A A A G {B B} {B B B} A A G G D {B B B} A A G G G G {B B.... ..} {C B B....}
G-Note Records was created in 2009.
the G note is above the F note. but triple high G has 3 lines below it and it's a squeal not a sound
No. It is only the dominant note in the scale of G.
1000 American dollars is a g note. a c note would be 100 American dollars.
G natural
To play a G note on the guitar, place your finger on the 3rd fret of the low E string and pluck that string. This will produce a G note.
A tonic is the root note of a musical piece. This note is what names the key that the song is in. So, if a minuet is written in the key of G, it's tonic note is G and its tonic chord is G major.
G
G#
It depends on whether you are playing High G or Low G. Great Highland bagpipes range from Low G to High A. From low G, play a G then a D gracenote on the low G melody note. For High G play a High G gracenote on the melody note F followed by the melody note G
No. On a certain note with both a sharp and flat, (G, for example) they are the same distance from G, but going in diferent directions. G sharp raises the note by one half step while G flat lowers the note by one half step. However, it is possible for a sharp note to mean the same note as a flat note. For example, G sharp is the same note as A flat. This is called being enharmonic.
low E G A, low E G B A, low E G A G Low E