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Treble and bass buttons on diatonic accordions play two different notes on the push/pull of the bellows while treble and bass buttons on chromatic accordions play the same note regerdless of the bellows direction.
Same as a B-flat cornet. Brass instruments, when transposing, are always referred to in a flat key rather than sharp.
They're given the same names as male counterparts: tenor, lead, baritone, and bass.
A note is a single sound, and a chord is a set of notes played at the same time to give a harmonious sound.
Any scale will have the same key signature in both the bass and treble clef. For A major, the key signature consists of F#, C#, and G#.To write the key signature:Treble Clef: the sharps correspond to the 1st and 3rd spaces, and the second line [F#, C#, and G#, respectively].Bass Clef: the sharps correspond to the 2nd and 4th spaces, and the 4th line [C#, G#, and F#, respectively).
No. Clarinets are in Trebel clef, Baritones are in Bass Clef
Not exactly, bass clarinets have five keys at the bottom instead of four, but other than that I think it is the same.
yes (its in the same key)
No. On a certain note with both a sharp and flat, (G, for example) they are the same distance from G, but going in diferent directions. G sharp raises the note by one half step while G flat lowers the note by one half step. However, it is possible for a sharp note to mean the same note as a flat note. For example, G sharp is the same note as A flat. This is called being enharmonic.
b flat
On a b-flat trumpet, A sharp is played with the first valve, same same as B flat.
No
F sharp is the same note.
No, the A is not the same as B sharp. B sharp would be the C note since there are no music notes between B and C. The C note would only be called a "B sharp" if C sharp is used in a key, since proper music note naming only allows for one note of each base name ("accidental" notes excluded). So rather than have two types of C notes, you would have a type of B note and a type of C note.
The parallel minor of F-sharp major is F-sharp minor. A parallel minor key is the one with the same tonic note.
Sure you can, but they are the same identical note.
Compare it to someone else playing the same note.