The fingerings are the same for the notes from third line D through the B above the staff. Above and below that range the fingerings are different.
No. They should be exactly the same.
Uhhh...all of the different types of saxes have the same fingerings?
The flute, because it has the exact same notes as the alto sax, but if its the tenor, then im not sure. The tenor has the same fingerings as an alto, but different notes. If you want the same fingerings, i would suggest the recorder.
The Alto Saxophone is in the key of E flat. That means that an E flat on the Alto Saxophone is the same pitch as a C on a piano or other concert pitch instrument.
i play the clarinet and it really easy and fun and NO!!! of course the fingerings arent the same!
any kind of saxophone. the fingerings are basically the same
All saxophones have the same fingerings, the notes just come out at different pitches :)
Ab on an Eb alto saxophone is the same as a G#. Played by holding down the first 3 fingers and the top pinky on the left hand.
Not exactly, bass clarinets have five keys at the bottom instead of four, but other than that I think it is the same.
It doesnt really matter, if your a beginner, you are capable of playing either, both take time to learn. They basically have the same fingerings and embouchure (mouth position), so you could play either as a beginner.
The primary difference between the Bb soprano saxophone and the Bb soprano clarinet (to choose equivalent members of their families) comes from the fact that the clarinet has a cylindrical bore and overblows a 12th (octave plus a fifth) while the saxophone overblows by an octave. This means that the saxophone's second octave fingers like the first octave, while the clarinet needs extra keys to get the first four notes of the second octave! There are other differences (for instance, the clarinet has a very large number of little-finger keys used for alternate fingerings, making it possible to play passages more smoothly which otherwise would be viciously hard to play at all.) But this is the fundamental difference between them. ( added on ) i don't know much about clarinets but I'm going to use this as an example. to play the same tone of another instrument you have different notes. For example. concert G would be A natural for saxaphones but a C for a horn
Alto saxophone has a similar reed