On C instruments (flute, piccolo, oboe, bassoon, low brass, all strings), concert F is their written F. On B-flat instruments (clarinet, Bass Clarinet, soprano and Tenor Saxophone, trumpet/cornet), concert F is written G. On F instruments (English horn, F horn), concert F is written C. On E-flat instruments (alto and Baritone Saxophone, alto clarinet), concert F is written D. On A instruments (A clarinet, piccolo trumpet), concert F is written A-flat. On G instruments (alto flute, G bugle), concert F is written B-flat.
On trumpet, concert G is written A.
A "concert" note refers to the sound that an instrument will make when the note C is fingered. Clarinets and trumpets are concert Bb instruments. A saxophone is a concert Eb instrument. This question makes no sense the way it is phrased since concert tuning refers to the relationship between what you will hear when C instruments play a C and what other instruments will sound like. What do you mean by a scale sheet? Are you trying to ask how the sound of the note C relates to another tone?
An electronic tuner will tell you which note you are singing (in concert pitch), or someone with perfect pitch could tell you.
For clarinet, the notes for the Concert F scale (Clarinet G) are as follows: G A B C D E F# G
Concert C is the clarinet's written D, so the notes for the major scale are D E F# G A B C# D
F
G
1st valve or open with the thumb valve. its a concert Bb
A concert F on a trumpet is the G note. Since a trumpet is pitched in Bb, trumpet players will always play one note above the concert pitch. Along with that trumpet players will always play in a different key from the concert pitch. Trumpet players will add two sharps to the concert pitch. i.e. If the concert pitch is Eb, 3 flats, then trumpet players will play in the key of F, 1 flat. trumpetman52
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
Mellophone has a concert B flat note tuned to F. Besides mellophone, the trumpet or fluglehorn are the closest.
Concert F chord.
On trumpet, concert G is written A.
F, G, A, Bb, C, D, E and F.
Concert d-flat is played as e-flat on the clarinet. To transpose any note from concert pitch, simply raise it one whole step; the result is the note you should play on a standard b-flat clarinet to match the concert pitch.
B
A