To play the high E note on the recorder, cover all the holes with your fingers and blow gently into the mouthpiece.
To play high E on the recorder, cover all the holes with your fingers and blow gently into the mouthpiece while keeping a steady airflow. This will produce the high E note.
To play the high E string on the guitar, place your finger on the 12th fret of the guitar neck and pluck the string with your picking hand. This will produce the high E note.
To play the high E recorder effectively, make sure to practice proper breath control, finger positioning, and embouchure. Keep your fingers close to the holes and blow gently to produce a clear and steady sound. Practice scales and exercises to improve your technique and control over the high notes.
The standard tuning note for the high E string on a guitar is E.
To play an E note on the guitar, place your index finger on the first fret of the third string (G string) and strum that string. This will produce the E note.
To play high E on the recorder, cover all the holes with your fingers and blow gently into the mouthpiece while keeping a steady airflow. This will produce the high E note.
To play high E on Recorder, You do regular E fingering, But with Pinched (Half) Thumb Hole
You put your middle finger on the second hole from the top and hold your thumb as you usually would, on the back of the recorder, the B note.
* You are going to learn a new note E on your recorder. * You will follow the teacher to do the exercise of E-G-A, A-G-E, E-A-G, G-E on your recorder (A&Q). * After exercise, you say the note names of the song It's Raining. * Then, you sing the note names of the song It's Raining. * You will be doing fingering on your recorder for the song It's Raining. * You will stay with a group of 10 people, and each group will play either first line or second line. * Finally, you will play whole song It's Raining on your recorder.
a d note is right under the e note
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.
put your right finger on the b and then put your ring finger on the second to last note
The simple notes to play "Alice in Wonderland" on the recorder are D, E, F#, G, A, B, high D, high E. These notes can be found in various online resources that provide sheet music for the recorder.
To play an E sharp on the recorder, you need to cover all the holes on the recorder with your fingers and blow air into the mouthpiece while pressing down the correct combination of holes. On a soprano recorder, the fingering for E sharp is the same as F natural. This means you cover all the holes on the recorder with your fingers, except for the first hole on the recorder's top. This will produce the E sharp note.
d natural
c[high c]g, e, a, b, a, g ,e thats all I know.
E on the recorder is your first three fingers on your left, and first two fingers on your right X3