<P> Double bass symphony parts sometimes indicate that the performer should play harmonics (also called flageolet tones), in which the bassist lightly touches the string--without pressing it onto the fingerboard in the usual fashion--in the location of a note and then plucks or bows the note . Bowed harmonics are used in contemporary music for their "glassy" sound . Both natural harmonics and artificial harmonics, where the thumb stops the note and the octave or other harmonic is activated by lightly touching the string at the relative node point, extend the instrument's range considerably . Natural and artificial harmonics are used in plenty of virtuoso concertos for the double bass . </P> <P> Orchestral parts from the standard Classical repertoire rarely demand the double bass exceed a two - octave and a minor third range, from E to G, with occasional A s appearing in the standard repertoire (an exception to this rule is Orff's Carmina Burana, which calls for three octaves and a perfect fourth). The upper limit of this range is extended a great deal for 20th - and 21st - century orchestral parts (e.g., Prokofiev's Lieutenant Kijé Suite (c. 1933) bass solo, which calls for notes as high as D and E ♭). The upper range a virtuoso solo player can achieve using natural and artificial harmonics is hard to define, as it depends on the skill of the particular player . The high harmonic in the range illustration found at the head of this article may be taken as representative rather than normative . </P> <P> Five - string instruments have an additional string, typically tuned to a low B below the E string (B). On rare occasions, a higher string is added instead, tuned to the C above the G string (C). Four - string instruments may feature the C extension extending the range of the E string downwards to C (sometimes B). </P> <P> Traditionally, the double bass is a transposing instrument . Since much of the double bass's range lies below the standard bass clef, it is notated an octave higher than it sounds to avoid having to use excessive ledger lines below the staff . Thus, when double bass players and cellists are playing from a combined bass - cello part, as used in many Mozart and Haydn symphonies, they will play in octaves, with the basses one octave below the cellos . This transposition applies even when bass players are reading the tenor and treble clef (which are used in solo playing and some orchestral parts). The tenor clef is also used by composers for cello and low brass parts . The use of tenor or treble clef avoids excessive ledger lines above the staff when notating the instrument's upper range . Other notation traditions exist . Italian solo music is typically written at the sounding pitch, and the "old" German method sounded an octave below where notation except in the treble clef, where the music was written at pitch . </P>

What is the highest note on a double bass