The reason is because the sound is created by different means and materials. On a guitar, it's a vibrating string. With Trumpet, the player's lips buzz into a mouthpiece and cause a tone to pass through the instrument.
The notes are produced by different techniques. On a guitar, the tone is made with a vibrating string which is amplified by the resonator. On a trumpet, the player's lips buzz into a mouthpiece and air travels through a long tube.
A trumpet is pitched in Bb. A flute is pitched in C. If a flute is playing a C, and a Trumpet is playing a C as well, the flute is playing a concert C, while the trumpet is playing a concert Bb. They are the same note on paper, but different concert pitches.
Assuming the guitar music is written for a standard guitar with no capo, and assuming you are playing on a B-flat trumpet, you transpose up a full step. So, if the guitar note is C, you play a D on a b-flat trumpet. If you are playing on a C trumpet, you don't have to transpose.
Any note can sound horrible if it is not played in a progression of matching sounds or with different notes that "clash" or do not sound good together. But every note can sound good if played in an orderly manner. Personally, I play the trumpet and in the trumpet, the F sharp note is very important and is very common. So, any key or note can sound good or horrible depending on how you play it.
Any note can sound horrible if it is not played in a progression of matching sounds or with different notes that "clash" or do not sound good together. But every note can sound good if played in an orderly manner. Personally, I play the trumpet and in the trumpet, the F sharp note is very important and is very common. So, any key or note can sound good or horrible depending on how you play it.
The trumpet has a nominal capability of playing 30 different notes (an expert can get more) and each note it plays is of a different frequency. There is no one, single "frequency" of a trumpet.
A trumpet is pitched in Bb. A flute is pitched in C. If a flute is playing a C, and a Trumpet is playing a C as well, the flute is playing a concert C, while the trumpet is playing a concert Bb. They are the same note on paper, but different concert pitches.
Assuming the guitar music is written for a standard guitar with no capo, and assuming you are playing on a B-flat trumpet, you transpose up a full step. So, if the guitar note is C, you play a D on a b-flat trumpet. If you are playing on a C trumpet, you don't have to transpose.
Any note can sound horrible if it is not played in a progression of matching sounds or with different notes that "clash" or do not sound good together. But every note can sound good if played in an orderly manner. Personally, I play the trumpet and in the trumpet, the F sharp note is very important and is very common. So, any key or note can sound good or horrible depending on how you play it.
Any note can sound horrible if it is not played in a progression of matching sounds or with different notes that "clash" or do not sound good together. But every note can sound good if played in an orderly manner. Personally, I play the trumpet and in the trumpet, the F sharp note is very important and is very common. So, any key or note can sound good or horrible depending on how you play it.
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.
The player makes a buzzing sound with their lips into the mouthpiece. These vibrations travel through the horn and comes out as a note. The pitch can be changed by pressing different combinations of valves or by changing the embechure.
Well, many or most of the notes are similar, although they will be in different "places," or valve placements, since the trumpets are in different "keys." What this means is that a "G" trumpet will play a "G" note when no fingering is used, and a "B" trumpet a "B" note.
The trumpet has a nominal capability of playing 30 different notes (an expert can get more) and each note it plays is of a different frequency. There is no one, single "frequency" of a trumpet.
onthe neck of a guitar there are lumps that go across it underneath the strinds called frets, when you press the string onto the fret and then puck the string it makes a sound. the closer to the body of the guitar the fret is, the more high pitched the note gets and vise versa. : )
Blow into the mouth piece while firmly pressing the lips together. If you remove the mouth piece from the Trumpet the sound made would sound like someone passing gas, if you are doing it correctly. The shape of the trumpet takes the vibrations made by blowing in this manner and changes them into different notes. The note made depends on how firmly your lips are pressed together and what valves you have depressed.
The shape of the sound wave alters the "timbre" of the sound. The best way to explain this is that a clarinet and a trumpet playing the same note have the same pitch, but the harmonics characteristic of each instrument are different, and so it's easy to tell the difference between the two.
A bass guitar is an octave lower than a guitar, for example the first string on a guitar is an E string that produces an E note when struck, the first string on a four string bass guitar is an E also and when struck also produces an E note, just this note is an octave lower than the guitars