Low C is two below the bottom line. High C is between the third and fourth line if you count from the bottom line up.
No but it is the same as the trumpet & piano(Afgncaap8 disagrees, saying that clarinet music isdifferent from flute, and that it is the same as trumpet, but the clarinet has different music than the piano! The piano is a C instrument, whereas the typical trumpet and clarinet tend to be tuned to B-flat. However, usually the flute and the piano are both tuned to C, so their music could be the same.)
See the related links section for a link to sheet music with fingerings.
See the related links section for a link to sheet music with fingerings.
Just find the sheet music for Guitar (which should be fairly simple) and transpose it for trumpet. In other words, re-write each note to be a half step below since guitar is in the key of C and trumpet is in the key of B flat
G, a, b, c, d, e, f#, g, f#, e, d, c, b, a, g See the related links section for a link to sheet music with fingerings.
G, a, b, c, d, e, f#, g, f#, e, d, c, b, a, g See the related links section for a link to sheet music with fingerings.
Great song, buy the music. c:
You can't It depends on what you mean. The B-flat trumpet plays one full tone below concert pitch, so to make the tone match, you must play one step higher. In other words, a C on the piano is a D on the trumpet. Chords work the same way. A C chord on the piano is a D chord on the trumpet. However, the trumpet can play only one note at a time, so a single trumpet cannot play a chord, but can play single notes of the chord.
Mr C's music in Marlborough, MA
the lowest note on a trumpet is an f sharp, but pedal tones can go lower. there is really no limit to how high a trumpet can play because there are mouthpieces that allow you to play higher. Also the piccolo trumpet and trumpets of other keys allow you to play much higher than possible of the Bb trumpet.
Assuming the guitar music is written for a standard guitar with no capo, and assuming you are playing on a B-flat trumpet, you transpose up a full step. So, if the guitar note is C, you play a D on a b-flat trumpet. If you are playing on a C trumpet, you don't have to transpose.
This is "Happy Birthday To You" in B flat major (the originalkey of trombone)F,F,G,F,B flat ,A,rest F,F,G,F C, B flat,rest, F,F,E flat D, B flat, A, G,rest, E flat, E flat, D, B flat, C, B flat,