All percussive instruments that have a tonal value are in the key of C, therefore, a Bb concert scale would be:
Bb C D Eb F G A Bb
B
Concert B-flat and written C are the same thing on a B-flat transposing instrument, such as a clarinet, trumpet, or tenor saxophone.
B flat concert means when a concert b flat is played, the concert pitched instruments finger a b flat and thats what comes out. For an alto saxophone to play a concert b flat, it must finger a g for a b flat to come out. a trumpet and clarinet has to finger a c.
There is no relationship between eighth notes and a concert scale.
If a horn is pitched in F, then a horn player that plays the C scale on the horn is, when compared to a piano or flute or violin (which is made in concert pitch), actually playing the F scale. The horn overall is in the key of F. The same goes if it's pitched in B-flat or E-flat: the C scale will actually be the concert B-flat scale or concert E-flat scale. I hope that helps. Let me know if anything needs further explanation. =)
B flat concert scale...just a guess
B flat, F, B flat are the basic three... B flat (the second one) would be your tunning note on a Bb concert scale.
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.
Bb C D Eb F G A Bb
Concert b flat is a c.
The B-flat major scale contains two flats: B-flat and E-flat. However, if you're looking for a scale that has only one B-flat, it would be the G minor scale, which is the relative minor of B-flat major. In G minor, the B-flat appears as the sixth scale degree, while the scale itself includes B-flat as part of its harmonic and melodic variations.
No such major has b flat and e flat.