Yes. They are both in treble clef. However, the two instruments are tuned differently, so the actual fingering is not the same.
the violin and something else
fiddle and mandolin
The clarinet and bassoon are members of the Woodwind family. These two instruments require the use of a reed to produce musical notes. Another member of the Woodwind family is the Oboe.
That is called a "tie". It joins the two notes together creating a single sound that lasts the duration of both notes added together.
Yes. They are both in treble clef. However, the two instruments are tuned differently, so the actual fingering is not the same.
the violin and something else
fiddle and mandolin
what are the notes to part 2 of morning mood
The two basic instruments used in Peking Opera are the jinghu, a two-stringed bowed instrument, and the yunluo, a set of tuned gongs. These instruments are critical to creating the traditional and distinctive sound of Peking Opera music.
The clarinet and bassoon are members of the Woodwind family. These two instruments require the use of a reed to produce musical notes. Another member of the Woodwind family is the Oboe.
Usually the way you play the notes are different. so the answer would be yes the note is different.
Any guitar can be tuned to C Major. C tuning is a type of guitar tuning. The guitar strings are tuned to be two whole steps lower than when they are normally tuned.
They are percussion instruments, specifically pitched (having specific melodic notes) percussion instruments. They are primarily found in orchestral (symphonic) music and -- these days -- in the pit (percussion section along the sideline) of marching bands. Each instrument has a different approach to pitches. The xylophone is laid out like a piano keyboard, and so each bar note is pretuned to the correct pitch and cannot be changed. A tympano (singular) drum is tunable within the range of pitches its head can handle being stretched or relatively loosened. Since Haydn's time, timpanists play using two timpani (plural form of the word) and these days, you typically see four timpani on stage for a symphonic concert, to handle orchestral literature of the last 100 years. Although both are pitched percussion instruments, they have vastly differing sounds. The xylophone emits very short high-pitched notes, since the percussionist is hitting wooden bars tuned to above middle C. The timpani (also loosely referred to as "kettle drums") emit sustained ringing low tones, as the notes that resonate out of the metallic "kettles" from the heads which are hit, are tuned to pitches below middle C.
There are many different types of counters for bank notes that are available. The main two types count coins and notes, though many machines can count both.
Pitched percussion instruments produce specific musical notes, like xylophones and marimbas. Unpitched percussion instruments, such as cymbals and tambourines, do not produce specific pitches and are used for rhythm and texture in music.
That is called a "tie". It joins the two notes together creating a single sound that lasts the duration of both notes added together.