4, 2, 1, 4, 2, 1, 3, 1, 2
For the A flat minor scale on the trombone, the positions are as follows: start with the 6th position for the note A♭, then move to 4th position for B♭, 5th position for C♭, 6th position for D♭, 5th position for E♭, 4th position for F♭, and finally back to 6th position for G♭. The scale consists of the notes A♭, B♭, C♭, D♭, E♭, F♭, and G♭.
The B-flat major scale for trombone consists of the following positions: 1st position (B♭), 4th position (C), 1st position (D), 4th position (E♭), 1st position (F), 4th position (G), and 2nd position (A). The notes in the scale are B♭, C, D, E♭, F, G, and A, returning to B♭. Trombone players typically use these positions to achieve the correct pitches while playing the scale.
The slide positions for the A Major scale, starting on low A, are as follows: A - 2 B - 7 C#- 5 D - 4 E - 2 F#- 5 G#- 3 A - 2
The slide positions for the A Major scale, starting on low A, are as follows: A - 2 B - 7 C#- 5 D - 4 E - 2 F#- 5 G#- 3 A - 2
B flat is in the d minor scale.
One, four, two, one, three, one, two, one. F, G, Anatural, Bb, C, D, Enatural, F
4, 2, 1, 4, 2, 1, 2, 1, 2, 1, 2, 4, 1, 2, 4,
F flat is simple an E scale. You didn't specify so I will give you both major and minor scales with notes and positions in parentheses The formula for a major scale is wwhwwwh so the E(Fb) major scale would be E(2)-F#(5)-G#(3)-A(2)-B(4)-C#(2)-D#(3)-E(2) On my trombone, the B is usually in a #4 and the High E is also a tad sharp. The [Musical]Minor scale in E(Fb) would contain the following notes E(2)-F#(5)-G(4)-A(2)-B(1)-C(3)-D(1)-E(2). If you need help in these, just remember your formulas. The slide positions are chromatic(half step intervals). That should help you if you need to think of them on the fly.
The minor scale that has B flat as its submediant is the D minor scale. In the D minor scale, the notes are D, E, F, G, A, B flat, and C, making B flat the sixth note, or submediant, of the scale.
The B major scale in the second octave on the trombone uses the following slide positions: B (1st position), C# (4th position), D# (6th position), E (1st position), F# (4th position), G# (6th position), and A# (8th position). The scale then resolves back to B in 1st position. This sequence allows for smooth transitions between notes within the scale.
C#-d#-f-f#-g#-a#-c-c# 5 3 1 5 3 1 3 2
F Major has a relative minor scale of D Minor.