A "blues scale" is a minor pentatonic scale with the additional sharped 4th/flatted fifth. Blues scales can start on any note but an example of the C minor blues scale is:
C, E♭, F, G♭, G, B♭, and C.
The structure of the scale is root (C), flatted 3rd (E♭), natural 4th (F), flatted 5th (G♭), natural 5th (G♮), flatted 7th (B♭) and back to the root again.
there are several blues scales just in different keys, but some of the more used ones are d which is d,f,g,g#,a,c,d g which is g,b flat, c,c#,d,f,g, and a which is a,c,d,d flat,e,g,a. also know that these are in the keys for alto (the concert pitches for these are f,b flat, and c)
Major scales: C, G, D, A, E, B , C flat ,F sharp, D flat, C sharp, A flat, E flat, B flat, and F.
Minor Scales: A, E, B, F sharp, C sharp, G sharp, A flat, D sharp, B flat, A sharp, F, C, G, and D.
If you mean the notes in a blues scale, it's C Eb F F# G Bb C
If you're talking about a blues progression, the most common one is I IV I V I.
Otherwise, I'm not sure what you mean.
pattern: 1, flat 3, 4, sharp 4, 5, flat 7 and 8
C blues: C, E♭, F, F♯, G, B♭, C
use the pattern with any major scale to figure out the blues scale
Farm out alto sax notes
The Alto Sax is the second smallest in the range, The Soprano Sax is the smallest and plays in the highest register. The Tenor fits in the range between the Alto and the Baritone and is a fairly standard Jazz and blues instrument playing in the Mid to Bass range
it allows the alto sax to make a different sound.
The E Harmonic Minor scale for the clarinet has the same key signature as its relative major scale of G major. To make the minor scale Harmonic minor the seventh note is raised (sharped). So: e - f# - g - a - b - c - d# - e are the notes you would play.
I think that the sax is cooler. It's partially because I play the alto sax, but I think the sax is easier too.
Yes and no, a symphony does have an alto sax sometimes but it is not required for it to have one. It really depends if the symphony is classical, blues, or jazz. Jazz and blues should always have an alto sax. Classical doesn't really need an alto sax, but it does make classical sound better.
That would be your F scale.
The Alto Sax is the second smallest in the range, The Soprano Sax is the smallest and plays in the highest register. The Tenor fits in the range between the Alto and the Baritone and is a fairly standard Jazz and blues instrument playing in the Mid to Bass range
A b on an alto sax is the the one below the top note up the top A b on an alto sax is the the one below the top note up the top A b on an alto sax is the the one below the top note up the top hahhh i HATE the B scale. wknfw. but if you know how to finger them the notes are: B C# D# E F# G# A# B (two octaves of that)
Farm out alto sax notes
The Alto Sax is the second smallest in the range, The Soprano Sax is the smallest and plays in the highest register. The Tenor fits in the range between the Alto and the Baritone and is a fairly standard Jazz and blues instrument playing in the Mid to Bass range
it allows the alto sax to make a different sound.
The E Harmonic Minor scale for the clarinet has the same key signature as its relative major scale of G major. To make the minor scale Harmonic minor the seventh note is raised (sharped). So: e - f# - g - a - b - c - d# - e are the notes you would play.
Adolphe Sax
I think that the sax is cooler. It's partially because I play the alto sax, but I think the sax is easier too.
The trumpet, alto sax and the Tenor sax. The Drums, Bass and Piano provide the rhythmic background gd luck ;)
The alto sax is generally not known as "an E flat sax", as a baritone saxophone is also in E flat.