The note names are abgfeddcbcagbedaadgebcddgcbeaadaddggeeb
I'm don't entirely get your question but if I am understanding it correctly you have the clarinet sheet music for We Wish You a Merry Christmas and would like to play it on the piano. To do this, you should transpose every note in your clarinet sheet music to concert pitch, since piano is a C instrument. (Moving everything down a whole step would do the trick.) Now play your transposed piece on the piano, and the pitches should be the same as on the clarinet.
Justin beiber
which a
Bass clarinet is the correct English name. Scores often have the instrument names in other languages but clarinetto basso (Italian), clarinette basse (French) and bassklarinette (German) are pretty obvious. On a lighter note, I once knew a follow who called his bass clarinet Susie, and I've heard the instrument called a variety of colorful names after a particularly difficult passage.
to play every note of the organ with the g on the clarinet and then play
clarinet notes are one note higher than flute
A concert b flat is a c on the clarinet, and chromatic means moving upwards by half-steps. Therefore: C, C#, D, D#, E, F, F#, G, G#, A, A#, B
There isn't really a greeting that is particular to Australia. 'Merry Christmas' or 'Happy Christmas' would be the main ones. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Please note there is no such language as "AUSTRALIAN", most people in Australia speak ENGLISH as their first language (with an Australian accent). Thus Australians would say "Merry Christmas".
Lower each note by a semitone.
Super C. :)
On the B-flat clarinet, a concert D is the lowest note.
i have no idea XD. i am just kiding the names are register keys and each one plays a different note depending how many buttons u hold. for example to play a G DO NOT hold any keys.