C4 is located on the treble clef staff as the middle C, which is the note directly below the first ledger line below the staff.
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, use your right hand with your thumb on C, middle finger on E, and pinky finger on G.
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.
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 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.
The bass clef starts at e2 and ends at b3, the treble clef starts at c4 and ends on g5. It's easier to play that way.
The bass clef, or F clef, is used on the staff for instruments playing mostly below middle C (C4). This keeps most of the notes in the bass clef staff, making them easier to write and read. See the Wikipedia article called "Scientific Pitch Notation" for an illustration of 10 octaves of the note C, using bass and treble clefs (F and G clefs): http:/en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_pitch_notation
In bass clef, middle C is only one ledger line above the staff, so it's perfectly reasonable to use.
The simplest answer is, read it down a third. In treble cleff, G is one line up from the bottom line. In bass clef, G is the bottom line. However, note that the bass cleff note would be an octave lower than its treble clef counterpart. But then, you have the added problem of transposing keys. For instance, B-flat trumpet music is written in a different key than tenor trombone or piano music. If the trombone part is in b-flat, the trumpet part will be in C, so depending on what music you are transposing, you may or may not have to change the key.
The c5 vertebra is located in the lower part of the neck, just below the c4 vertebra. The c4 vertebra is slightly higher up in the neck compared to the c5 vertebra.
Jump on over to Smokinvette.com and there are diagrams for every C4 in the C4 section. Just ask "corvetteDon" he has a ton of information on C4's! Good luck!
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 =)
in the bundlsheath cells
they are the 2nd and 3rd bone of your spine located at the posterior side of the neck
Well, honey, a standard flute can play down to a low C, which is the C below middle C on the piano. So, if you're looking to hit those super low notes, you might want to pick up a bass flute or a contrabass flute instead. Happy tooting!
C4 is located in the mission "Track the Transmitters", AK-47's are located in the mission "Bust some bunkers".
Yes, but if you die, you drop the C4.