G. It's a G on everything
Take the upper octave fingerings of the B flat clarinet (D in the staff to a D above the staff) and they produce the same notes on the tenor saxophone. On tenor saxophone, you would use the same fingerings for notes regardless of which octave you are in (for example: a D in the staff is the same fingering as a D below the staff) either adding the octave key to make the note higher or lower. The only inconsistencies with no relation between clarinet and tenor are the fingerings for C (middle key in the left hand on tenor) and C sharp (no keys down on tenor) Notes in the octave above the staff are different from clarinet to tenor as well.
I Dunno :L Edit: The highest note possible is an A above high C; or 4 ledger lines above the staff. In most of the common repetoire, however, oboes rarely play anything above the D above the staff.
The first open note above a low G: CThe first open note above the G on the staff: CThe first open note above the G above the staff: A
A note at the bottom of the staff does not have a higher than a note at the top of the staff. As notes go up the staff, they are higher.
The really high E would be the E written three ledger lines above the staff. One octave lower will be the E written in the top space of the staff.
On a regular one its b below the staff-f above the staff some saxes have Bb and F#
Take the upper octave fingerings of the B flat clarinet (D in the staff to a D above the staff) and they produce the same notes on the tenor saxophone. On tenor saxophone, you would use the same fingerings for notes regardless of which octave you are in (for example: a D in the staff is the same fingering as a D below the staff) either adding the octave key to make the note higher or lower. The only inconsistencies with no relation between clarinet and tenor are the fingerings for C (middle key in the left hand on tenor) and C sharp (no keys down on tenor) Notes in the octave above the staff are different from clarinet to tenor as well.
Downward.
I Dunno :L Edit: The highest note possible is an A above high C; or 4 ledger lines above the staff. In most of the common repetoire, however, oboes rarely play anything above the D above the staff.
The fingerings are the same for the notes from third line D through the B above the staff. Above and below that range the fingerings are different.
The first open note above a low G: CThe first open note above the G on the staff: CThe first open note above the G above the staff: A
The C note two octaves above middle C on the piano.
a really really high note
A note at the bottom of the staff does not have a higher than a note at the top of the staff. As notes go up the staff, they are higher.
The really high E would be the E written three ledger lines above the staff. One octave lower will be the E written in the top space of the staff.
A ledger line is a line on a musical stave that you insert when a note is written above or below the stave. For example, in the treble clef, a ledger line is seen when a note is written below middle C, or above the second A above middle C.
It is B Edit: Top line of Bass Clef is A. One ledger line above the bass clef would be C. (Middle C if you were reading piano grand staff). The second ledger line would be E. The second ledger line above the staff in bass clef is E. Not B.