Bb, C, D, Eb, F, G, and your major seventh is A.
For the Bb clarinet it's G B flat A D. All of course the high notes, but not super high
If you play the notes of a major chord one at a time you are playing an arpeggio. The notes of the A Major chord are A-C#-E-A. Two Octave Arpeggio for Clarinet (Ascending) A-C#-E-A-C#-E-A (Decending) A-E-C#-A-E-C#-A
The notes in an f major scale are just all notes from one f two the next with a b flat instead of a b natural.
umm u play all low notes its e g a e g b flat a e g a g e
With your fingers and by blowing in it.
There are no flats or sharps. Its relative major scale is C major, which has all of the same notes.
The Notes For The Titanic Clarinet are: CDEDCDBEBAED! That's All I Knoww.! srry Pllz I Tried it at homee! That's The First Verse!!!;)
For the the common Bb clarinet:F A C.An arpeggio consists of the first, third, fifth, notes of a scale, usually played ascending and then descending. The three notes of an arpeggio also make up a major triad. "Concert" means in the key of C, but the clarinet is in Bb, so first convert Eb in C to its counterpart in Bb, which is F.The scale name is F Major, and the notes in the scale: F, G, A, Bb, C, D, E, . Taking the first, third, and fifth notes, it becomes: F, A, C. When playing this arpeggio, a musician would usually play (ascending) F, A, C, F, (descending) C, A, F.
on youtube look up dynamite with notes. thrn under the subcription it will show all the notes
a bcd cdba cd ab
-The notes are CGGFGFCCDDCDFGAGFCCCGFDCGGFGFCCDDCDFGCCAGFCCAGDFAGFCAGFGCFEDCEDCDDFAGFCDDEFDCDFF-----AGFCFGCGGFGFCCDDCDFGAGFCCCGFDCGGFGFCCDDCDFGCCAGFCCAGFDAGFCAGFGCFEDCEDCDDFAGFCCDD­FGDCDFFAGFCFG This is all i know sorry but i hope you enjoy
In an orchestra, the "normal key" is C. So, if you are playing a C note on a C clarinet it will sound as a C. On a B(B flat) clarinet, when you play C it will sound B flat. On an A clarinet a C will sound as if A was played and consequently on a G clarinet a C will sound as a G. So for the clarinets B, A and G, music needs to be transposed (changed), so that we play the correct notes. This is done so we can switch between different clarinets. Otherwise we would need to learn different fingerings for all the different clarinets. The C clarinet is not transposed and we play it as it is. I hope this makes sense... :)