For the bottom 2 lower octives it is just like A flat, Left thumb, 1, 2, 3, left pinky, and right pinky. As for the upper octive you take away your 1st left finger ,and Left thumb. Remember for the Upper octives blow faster air and Lowest octive you blow warm air.
A c sharp on a Flute can also be called a d flat. you only need one finger to play this note; your right pinky.
Same as B-flat.
Open "G" First Finger "A" Second Finger "B" Third Finger "B sharp" Fourth Finger "C"
Same as B-flat.
Hold down every key on your left hand (apart from G#) and your fourth finger on your right hand. Tra la! F#
Step 1. Position your fingers for g Step 2. Put your fourth finger on the key it is above You now have g flat (f sharp)
A sharp G G E sharp G E sharp A sharp A sharp C C A sharp C E sharp G A G E sharp A sharp A sharp A sharp G E sharp C this is not on the Flute btw idk what instrument its on
A sharp G G E sharp G E sharp A sharp A sharp C C A sharp C E sharp G A G E sharp A sharp A sharp A sharp G E sharp C this is not on the flute btw idk what instrument its on
When u put ur hand at the back of the flute the circle there
e sharp is the same as d natural, which is (if you didnt know) thumb 1,2 1,2,3
G flat is the enharmonic of F sharp; thumb and three fingers without the pinky on the left hand, and third finger with pinky on the right hand.
It depends on which g sharp you mean. I will address the two possibilities in first position. To play the g sharp on the g string extend your first finger back. To play the g sharp on the d string extend your fourth finger forwards.
Same as G sharp. All the notes in G (hence all three fingers) plus the fourth finger key -- all notes played using left hand, right hand is not used.
C, C sharp/D flat, D, D sharp/E flat, E, F, F sharp/G flat, G, G sharp/A flat, A, A sharp/B flat, B, C.