That would be your F scale.
F, g, a, b flat, c, d, e, f
g flat, a flat, b flat, b, d flat, e flat, f, g flat
B flat concert means when a concert b flat is played, the concert pitched instruments finger a b flat and thats what comes out. For an alto saxophone to play a concert b flat, it must finger a g for a b flat to come out. a trumpet and clarinet has to finger a c.
Play an E.
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To play the B flat minor scale on the guitar, start on the 6th string at the 6th fret and play the following notes: B flat, C, D flat, E flat, F, G flat, A flat, and B flat. Practice moving up and down the fretboard to become familiar with the scale.
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Generally the first note that you will learn to play is a concert B-flat or a concert A-flat as they are easy to play being in the middle of the saxophone range.
The notes are: G, A, B, C, D, C, B, A, G
You don't specify instrument. For piano, you would use: Right Hand: 3 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 Left Hand: 3 2 1 4 3 2 1 3 It depends on the instrument. Fingerings for a trumpet are completely different for a clarinet, for instance. However, the notes for an E-flat major scale are E-flat, F, G, A-flat, B-flat, C, D, E-flat. You finger each note correctly for whatever instrument you are using. It should also be noted that different instruments play in different keys, so an E-flat scale on a piano corresponds to the F scale on a trumpet, or a C scale on an Alto Sax, or a B-flat scale on a French Horn.
Well on C instrument, such as flutes and percussion, the F major scale is all naturals, except for B flat. For alto saxophone, which mine is E flat, I'm pretty sure it's your d major scale which is just F and C sharp...hope that helps, unfortunately, I don't know what instrument you want to play F major in
All three left and all three on the right. Without the octave key