first of all they r the same on every instrument
A major has F#,C# and G# (and maybe D# play it with it and see if it sounds rite!)
This is the scale of F major on the flute: F G A Bb C D E F.
Yes
The Bb major scale on a flute is Bb, C, D, Eb, F, G, A, Bb.
For flute the F scale in thirds going up the scale follows the pattern of F, A, G, Bb, A, C, Bb, D, C, E, D, F, E, G, F and is reversed to go down the scale.
It is played in the b flat scale.
Get a fingering chart.
As a flute is a non-transposing instrument, you don't need to worry too much about 'concert pitch'. If you think of the piano being the decider of pitch. If you play a Bb on a non-transposing instrument, it will sound the same as a piano Bb, however on a transposing instrument, for example a clarinet, it would sound like a piano's Ab. If someone says 'play a Bb concert scale' it means play a Bb scale at 'concert pitch' (i.e. the pitch of a piano). This would mean a clarinet would play a C scale and it would sound like a concert Bb scale because it is a transposing instrument. For a flute, a 'Bb concert scale' would just be a Bb scale (i.e. Bb, C, D, Eb, F, G, A) A 'B concert scale' would just be a B scale (i.e. B, C#, D#, E, F#, G#, A#)
g a b c d e f# g
A shakuhachi is a Japanese flute tuned to a pentatonic scale, and played vertically rather than horizontally.
C#, d#, e##, f#, g#, a#, b#, c#.
E, f#, g, a, b, c, d, e
B flat scale would be b flat, C, D, E flat, F, G, A, and High B flat