Im guessing it was an oboe could not tell? The original instrument was a cello that was tuned specially for the music for Noir.
It can mean a couple of different things. In solfege, the art of singing without the aid of a tuned instrument, the syllables do re mi, etc can take the place of the notes of a song, with 'do' representing the 'tonic', no matter what the key signature is. This is the moveable do system. Do can also be assigned to the standard pitch C, with the other syllables following accordingly. So mi can be the note a major third up from a song's tonic or key, and mi can also represent the fixed tone E. In most uses in the US, the moveable do is used.
I believe it was an open E tuning.
All of the strings are tuned down a half step, with the low E string tuned down a step and a half. It would be (from lowest to highest) C#, G#, C#, F#, A#, and D#.
True
"standard" or "concert" tuning is EADGBE low to high. There are many possible tunings, however, dozens at least.
EADGBE is concert pitch tuning for a guitar.DGCFAD is one tone lower.This would mean other instruments would have to adjust to suit,which usually is not recommended.The guitar tuned to the latter would sound ok if played by itself or with other guitars tuned the same because it is tuned to itself.Usually when instruments play together,they are all tuned to concert pitch.
Nope, still (low to high) eADGBE
I just checked its tuned percussion (85%sure). writen by lindi :)
The only instruments I can think of that can be tuned to a C would be clarinet and trumpet. Most tuning notes are a Concert Bb. Concert notes are different on almost any instrument.
the difference is that a tuned percussion instrument gives is a nice vibrant sound when on the other hand an percussion instrument that's not tuned either gives it a flat papery sound or just an annoying echo
A tuned instrument can play a tune, but an untuned instrument can only play a rythm.
no
Yes. Each tell is tuned to a specific note.
"Concert" tuning is the same on standard electric and acoustic guitars: EADGBE. No one says you can't tune either type of guitar to something else. However, there are multiple types of electric and acoustic guitars, for example: - 12-string guitar (EADGBE, then EADG high octaves and BE unison strings) - 7-string guitar (BEADGBE, or EADGBE with high-octave G) - baritone guitar (BEADGB) - tenor guitar (CGDA, DGBE and other variations) - Nashville tuning (EADGBE, but with EADG as high octaves -- basically a 12-string without the "normal" strings) - short-scale guitar (eg. Tacoma Papoose, which is tuned ADGCEA)
Tympani or kettle drums
It means that it has been matched to the correct range of notes, letting you play a song in the same harmony as you would like, according to the Oxford dictionary