well I am pretty sure that Tenor Saxophone keyed in Bb so the notes are the same just diffrenent fingerings or in this case differnt slides
The notes for scales on the piano are the exact same notes for corresponding scales on the saxophone. However, as the alto saxophone is in Eb and the tenor saxophone is in Bb, you will have to account for these differences by raising the piano notes by a minor third or lowering the piano notes by a whole step, respectively.
No. Your basic trombone is a tenor trombone, it's what everyone just calls a trombone. However, triggers can be added to make playing fast rhythms on a trombone easier. Triggers are also used to make it possible to reach lower notes that are difficult to play on a standard tenor trombone.
TrumpetTrombonesTriangle
Yes! The alto saxophone has a whole family of relatives. Some are the barri saxophone, the tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, bass saxophone and contra-bass saxophone. The sub-contra-bass saxophone, sopranino saxophone and soprillo saxophone are very uncommon and expensive also, you may never run across one.
if anyone can find them can please also find them for tenor
The notes for scales on the piano are the exact same notes for corresponding scales on the saxophone. However, as the alto saxophone is in Eb and the tenor saxophone is in Bb, you will have to account for these differences by raising the piano notes by a minor third or lowering the piano notes by a whole step, respectively.
if you are playing on alto or baritone play the notes up a fourth or up 2 whole steps and 1 half step if you are playing on tenor or soprano then they are the same notes
Many saxophone players can easily switch between different types of saxophones (soprano, alto, tenor, bari, etc.) because the notes are the same for each saxophone.
No. Your basic trombone is a tenor trombone, it's what everyone just calls a trombone. However, triggers can be added to make playing fast rhythms on a trombone easier. Triggers are also used to make it possible to reach lower notes that are difficult to play on a standard tenor trombone.
TrumpetTrombonesTriangle
The cast of Calle 54 - 2000 includes: Cachao as Bass Gato Barbieri as himself Peter Brainin as Tenor Saxophone Sam Burtis as Trombone Michel Camilo as himself Eliane Elias as herself Rolando Guerrero as Congas Matt Hilgenberg as Trumpet Jack Jeffers as Bass Trombone Marshall McDonald as Alto Saxophone Mike Migliore as Tenor Saxophone Tito Puente as himself Max Schweiger as Baritone Saxophone Rick Stepton as Trombone Papo Vasquez as Trombone
Yes! The alto saxophone has a whole family of relatives. Some are the barri saxophone, the tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, bass saxophone and contra-bass saxophone. The sub-contra-bass saxophone, sopranino saxophone and soprillo saxophone are very uncommon and expensive also, you may never run across one.
if anyone can find them can please also find them for tenor
The yenor saxophone is definately better because the notes are more powerful and less squeeky than the alto.
Take the upper octave fingerings of the B flat clarinet (D in the staff to a D above the staff) and they produce the same notes on the tenor saxophone. On tenor saxophone, you would use the same fingerings for notes regardless of which octave you are in (for example: a D in the staff is the same fingering as a D below the staff) either adding the octave key to make the note higher or lower. The only inconsistencies with no relation between clarinet and tenor are the fingerings for C (middle key in the left hand on tenor) and C sharp (no keys down on tenor) Notes in the octave above the staff are different from clarinet to tenor as well.
the tenor saxophone is woodwind insterment
A great tenor for anyone is Jupiter. It has great tone quality, may play out of tune when playing high notes.