you barley breathe, it should look like this ●●●▏●●● then you press the farthest key (the one that is cylander like) you can press the low d♭ key to it doesn't make a difference
C (sometimes called Bsharp)
no it does not. the lowest you can go is a low d.
if you know how to hold a flute, it should just be first finger, bottom pinky
left thumb key,first left finger, first right finger and right pinky
If you have a Bfootjoint... the lowest note is a B natural, one note below Middle C. If you have a Cfootjoint.. the lowest note is a C natural or Middle C.
B c d e f g a b c d
If you are referring to the lowest note a normal, C foot flute can play, the answer is yes... sometimes. A flute with a B foot joint can go half a step lower, which is B. There is an extra key to allow you to go lower.
A flute can play only one note at a time, so a single flute cannot play a chord. A C2 chord however is C, D, and G, so three flutes playing at the same time can play a C2 if one flute plays each of those notes.
C natural, commonly reffered to as the normal "C" fingering for flute is the first finger, and the last pinky for leverage. It is the same for Middle C and High C, and maybe Low C, I dunno if there is a low C on flute, but if there is, it's the same fingering. That is First Finger, and Pinky, NO THUMB. For a C Sharp(most comminly written as D flat) the keys are the pinky only.
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.
The Hyperbass flute is the largest and lowest pitched instrument in the flute family, with tubing reaching over 8 metres in length. It is pitched in C, four octaves below the concert flute, (three octaves below the bass flute, two octaves below the contrabass flute, and one octave below the double contrabass flute), with its lowest note being Co, one octave below the lowest C on the standard piano. At 16 Hz, this is below what is generally considered the range of human hearing (20 to 20,000 Hz).
Lowest Contrabassoon Second lowest Bassoon Third lowest Bass saxophone Fourth lowest Baritone saxophone Fifth lowest Tenor saxophone Sixth lowest Alto Saxophone Seventh lowest Bass flute Eighth lowest Oboe Ninth lowest English Horn Tenth lowest Recorder Eleventh lowest Transverse flute Twelfth lowsest Alto flute Thirteenth lowest Soprano saxophone Fourtheenth lowest Pan flute Fifthteenth lowest Piccolo or fife (15th lowest would be the highest-pitched woodwind instrument)