To play the C4 piano chord correctly, place your thumb on the C key, your middle finger on the E key, and your pinky finger on the G key. Press all three keys simultaneously to produce the C4 chord.
To play a C4 chord on the piano, place your right hand fingers on the C, E, and G keys simultaneously. Press down on these keys to sound the chord.
To play a C4 chord on the piano, use your right hand with your thumb on C, middle finger on E, and pinky finger on G.
To play the c4 guitar chord, place your index finger on the first fret of the B string, middle finger on the second fret of the D string, and ring finger on the third fret of the A string. Strum from the A string down.
To play the C4 guitar chord, place your index finger on the 4th fret of the A string, your ring finger on the 6th fret of the D string, and your pinky finger on the 6th fret of the G string. Strum from the A string down to the high E string.
The fingering for a C4 chord on the guitar is typically played by placing your third finger on the 5th string, 3rd fret, your second finger on the 4th string, 2nd fret, and your first finger on the 2nd string, 1st fret.
To play a C4 chord on the piano, place your right hand fingers on the C, E, and G keys simultaneously. Press down on these keys to sound the chord.
To play a C4 chord on the piano, use your right hand with your thumb on C, middle finger on E, and pinky finger on G.
To play the c4 guitar chord, place your index finger on the first fret of the B string, middle finger on the second fret of the D string, and ring finger on the third fret of the A string. Strum from the A string down.
To play the C4 guitar chord, place your index finger on the 4th fret of the A string, your ring finger on the 6th fret of the D string, and your pinky finger on the 6th fret of the G string. Strum from the A string down to the high E string.
The fingering for a C4 chord on the guitar is typically played by placing your third finger on the 5th string, 3rd fret, your second finger on the 4th string, 2nd fret, and your first finger on the 2nd string, 1st fret.
It depends on what you mean: 1) How do you play the chord Eb6 on the piano. Answer: Eb6 is a standard Eb major chord (Eb - G - Bb) with an added 6th. The sixth degree of the scale of Eb is C, so, on a piano, you'd play Eb6 by playing the notes Eb, G, Bb and C simultaneously. Or... 2) Which note is the note Eb6 on a piano. All notes are numbered with a name and a number, to help distinguish between them. Middle C is C4, so to find Eb6, go up two octaves from middle C (to C6) then find the Eb above that (a minor third above). This is Eb6. I hope at least one of these is the answer to your question.
-- major third-- minor third-- perfect fifth
C4-f5
To transpose from concert pitch to horn pitch, you transpose it up a fifth or down a fourth. A fifth up from C4 would be G4, so you would play a G4 on the horn for a C4. Hope this helps =)
Most likely a piano and guitar. According to the song's page on musicnotes.com, it requires a vocal range from C4 to C6 which is soprano.
Ukuleles are commonly tuned G4 C4 E4 A4, the baritone ukuleles are tuned D3 G3 B3 E4.
A note with a number (like C4) represents a note (C) in a particular octave (4th). A note without a number represents that note in any octave, and could be played in any octave. In the example, C4 represents "Middle C", or the 4th C up from the lowest C on a grand piano - 4 octaves above C0. A4 is the standard notation for a frequency of 440Hz.