You need to push the octave key with your left hand thumb, the first two palm keys with your left hand palm, and the top side key with the side of your right hand index finger. A flat chin and lots of air will also help!
In order to play a high G on an Alto Saxophone, you play a g and then add the octave key. If you do not know how to play a G, check a fingering chart, and hopefully you know what an octave key is. Any questions, message me!
high F# is the three palm keys on the left hand, the octave key, and the top palm key on your right hand.
Its' going to sound weird, but you kinda have to put a little more air behind it and tighten your mouth.
octave key, top side key, and all 3 palm keys
A high F in the staff.
The highest note is a high F above the staff.
Only intermediate level or higher saxophones have the high F# key, beginner and student level saxes don't.
A very awkward place. It is in between the trill keys and the low c d# keys.
you play 2 and back key i think
As a tenor sax, my highest note is the third octave F.
F Sharp on the saxophone is when you have all three keys on the top of the saxophone pushed down the the middle key down at the bottom pushed down.
It is in the key of concert Bb. On alto saxophone there is one sharp (F#). There is a link to the sheet music for it in the related links, which includes both piano and alto saxophone.
A Typical saxophone can play from a low B to a high f. Professional saxophones can play from low b to high f sharp. Select soprano saxophones can go from low b to high g and select bari saxes can go from low a to high f.
F# = top 3 fingers down. and the middle key on the bottom 3 fingers.
As a tenor sax, my highest note is the third octave F.
F Sharp on the saxophone is when you have all three keys on the top of the saxophone pushed down the the middle key down at the bottom pushed down.
It is in the key of concert Bb. On alto saxophone there is one sharp (F#). There is a link to the sheet music for it in the related links, which includes both piano and alto saxophone.
A typical alto saxophone can reach a B-flat one octave lower than its natural octave and a high F-natural (sometimes F-sharp) one octave higher than its natural octave. So some notes that can be played are A-flat, B-natural, and G-sharp, which are all in the alto saxophone's natural octave.
A Typical saxophone can play from a low B to a high f. Professional saxophones can play from low b to high f sharp. Select soprano saxophones can go from low b to high g and select bari saxes can go from low a to high f.
g sharp
F# = top 3 fingers down. and the middle key on the bottom 3 fingers.
The highest possible note on the Saxophone is the high F#, which can be only played with the high F# key on only step-up saxes. However, this is not typically played. There are no written notes higher than this, but you can create your own "controlled squeaks" on your sax. (Which isn't the most pleasant sound in the world.)
Saxophone Improvisations Series F was created on 1972-02-25.
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The notes from lowest to highest on Alto Saxophone are, A#, B, C, C#, D, D#, E, F, F#, G, G#, A, A#, B, C, C#, D, D#, E, F, F#, G, G#, A, A#, B, C, C#, D, D#, E, F. Hope this helped I got these from my band book ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS 2000.
F sharp, A sharp, C sharp, E natural