The highest note among C, E, F, and D is E. In musical terms, the notes can be arranged in ascending order as C, D, E, and F, making E the highest in this group.
They are E E F G G F E D C C D E E- D- E E F G G F E D C C D E D- C- D- E C D EF E C B- C B A A B- C C D E D- C- C C C C C- B- C-- C C C C-- The - after a note means hold for 2 and the -- after a note means hold for 4 and the 2 notes together means its a tee-tee. I got this out of the Essential Elements 2000.
The notes in the C major scale from highest to lowest are C, D, E, F, G, A, and B.
E-E-F-G-G-F-E-D-C-C-D-E-E-D-D E-E-F-G-G-F-E-D-C-C-D-E-D-C-C D-D-E-C-D-E-F-E-C E-E-F-G-G-F-E-D-C-C-D-E-D-C-C Thank you.
The names of each guitar string note, from lowest to highest pitch, are E, A, D, G, B, and E.
In the key of C major: E E F G G F E D C C D E E_ D D_ E E F G G F E D C C D E D_ C C_ D D E C D E F E C D E F E D C D G E E E F G G F E D C C D E D_ C C_
Among the notes E, F, C, and D, F is the highest. In a standard musical scale, F is positioned above E, D, and C. Therefore, when comparing these notes, F has the highest pitch.
here are the note names E,E,E,G,G,A,E,D,C,A,E,E,C,D,D,E,D,C
I'm not sure if this is the correct key, but the following notes will play the entirety of the tune: D D# E C. E C. E C.... C C# D E C D E. B D. C..... D D# E C. E C. E C.... C B Bb A C D E. D C A D...... D D# E C. E C. E C.... C C# D E C D E. B D. C..... C D E C D E. C D C E C D E. C D C E C D E. B D. C..... (Key: The periods above represent sustained rythm in eighth notes. Each dot means hold the note a half a beat longer. # equals a sharp note and b equals a flat note.) In any key, the solfedge (using movable do) would be as follows: Re Ri Mi Do. Mi Do. Mi Do.... Do Di Re Mi Do Re Mi. Ti Re. Do.... (etc) The piece is "The Entertainer" by Scott Joplin and was used as the theme for the film "The Sting"
That depends on the player. Typically a cellist should be able to comfortably play a C one octave above middle C and higher. If you include harmonic notes the player should be able to play an E two octaves above middle C. However this does depend on the player. Check out Celloonline.com
They are E E F G G F E D C C D E E- D- E E F G G F E D C C D E D- C- D- E C D EF E C B- C B A A B- C C D E D- C- C C C C C- B- C-- C C C C-- The - after a note means hold for 2 and the -- after a note means hold for 4 and the 2 notes together means its a tee-tee. I got this out of the Essential Elements 2000.
c at da top of the clarinet e at tha top f at tha top e again hold it as a whole note repeat this again then rest c at tha top e at tha top f at tha top hold e as a half note hold e again as a half note c as a half note e as a half note d as a whole note e as a note e again d as a note c as half rest c again as a note e half note g as a note g again g half note f as a half note rest f e f e half note c half note another c half d half the whole note c rest c e f e half note c half note e half note f half note e whole note e rest c
The notes for EastEnders on the keyboard are c d e f g a f f e d c c g g c d c d e f g a f f e d c c g e f or an easy way to learn it is from the start on the highest note of the keyboard. Go down 5 and then skip a key then go back and forth 3 ties then repeat.
E, F#, G, A, B, C, D#, E (F# is the black note after F; D# is the black note after D)
(Quarter notes) B(Flat) B F F G G (Half note) F. (Quarter notes) E(Flat) E D D C C (Half note) B(Flat)
The main major chords on a piano are as follows, the first note being the lowest note in the chord, last note being the highest. C MAJOR; c,e,g. D MAJOR; d, f sharp, a. E MAJOR; e, g sharp, b. F MAJOR; f, a, c. A MAJOR; a, c sharp, e. B MAJOR; b, d sharp, f sharp. Hope this helps.
c,d,e,f,g,a,c,d,e,f,g,a,c,d,e,f,g,a,c,d,e,f,g,a,c,d,e,f,g,a,c,d,e,f,g,a,c,d,e,f,g,a,c,d,e,f,g,a,c,d,e,f,g,a,c,d,e,f,g,a,c,d,e,f,g,a,c
If you want the Vocal notes ( the actual lyrics) they are: D#/ E/ F#/ F#/ A/ D#/ D# ( whole note)/ F#/ A/ D#/ C#/ B/ D#/ D#/G#/B/B/ D#/E/F#/F#/E/D# ( whole note)/ D# ( whole note)/D#/F#/E/D#/C#/D#/C#/C/B This will get you to: ...tried to reassemble it. Sorry that I don't know all of it.