Same as you go up. Just play all the notes, including the accidentals. Until you get to B flat, where you stop.
Haha, it's a chromatic scale, so: Bb, B, C, C#, D, Eb, E, F, F#, G, G#, A
A concert b flat is a c on the clarinet, and chromatic means moving upwards by half-steps. Therefore: C, C#, D, D#, E, F, F#, G, G#, A, A#, B
on a b flat clarinet
g g# a b flat b c c# d e flat e f f# g All chromatics go up in semitones until you reach the first (tonic) note again.
A chromatic scale on any musical instrument is a scale that usually goes up 1 octave then goes down again. The difference between these and a regular scale is, are all the notes including the ones' in between, like sharps and flats or, in other words, half steps. For example, a C chromatic scale would start out like this: C, C sharp, D, E flat, E, F, F sharp, G, flat, A, A sharp, B, C, then back down.
You find B on the keyboard, then play the black key rightbefore it.
It depends on the instrument. For example, on a B-flat clarinet it starts on a C the d e f g a B (natural) high c and then you come down, same with the trumpet. Flutes and pianos are in concert pitch, so they start on a B-flat.
B-flat up to G is a major 6th. Or, B-flat down to G is a minor 3rd.
High B-flat, down to high A. Then back up to high B-flat, and down to high G. EX: B(b), A, B(b), G.
You should know all your scales.. theres D B flat A flat G F C And chromatic these scales should all be mastered if you play trombone.
There are two half-steps in the key of b: D to E flat and A to B flat.
There is just ONE chromatic scale. It's just the full length of the keyboard- up and back down.