The capo effectively acts as a moving nut (or as a barre finger) A capo is useful for transposing the key of a song, especially if the song contains a lot of open strings or open chords, if the song contains only bar chords, then there may be no point of using a capo as you could just as easily transpose the bar chords to the desired key Capos are particularly useful if you are intending to sing along while playing the guitar If you find you cant sing the song in a particular key, try using the capo at different frets until you find a key that you can sing in
A sort of bar or movable nut, attached to the finger board of a guitar or other fretted instrument for the purpose of raising uniformly the pitch of all the strings
(Muzik) The da capo aria was a musical form prevalent in the Baroque era. It was sung by a soloist with the accompaniment of instruments, often a small orchestra. The da capo aria was common in the musical genres of opera and oratorio
(from the Italian da, meaning 'from' and capo, meaning 'head') Abbreviated to D C An instruction to players to repeat from the beginning Da capo al fine means repeat from beginning to end Da capo al segno means repeat until the specified sign is reached
the beginning decrescendo(>)-get gradually softer, also known as diminuendo dissonance-dischordant and bad-sounding chords dolce-sweetly dynamics-volume E