The correct scale for concert pitch C on a tenor horn is a C major.
The tenor sax always plays a whole tone above concert pitch instruments like the organ. If the organist is playing in C then the tenor sax plays in D. This is because when you play lin key of C on the tenor sax you are playing in Bb concert. So you always have to raise your pitch by a whole tone in order to be in tune with the concert pitch instruments
Bass>>Tenor>>Alto>>Soprano If you want to get technical there are scales between those 4. For example Baritone sits between Bass and Tenor.
B flat.
Slide positions for B-flat tenor trombone concert pitch to middle C: C (6th), D(4th), E(2nd), F(1st), G(4th), A(2nd), B(4th), middle C (3rd)
A note played on tenor sax sounds one full step lower (actually an octave and a step, but you can ignore the octave). Play a C and it sounds like a B-flat. If you want to transpose music written for organ or piano, write the new part one note higher and change the key signature by taking away two flats or adding two sharps. the organist can probably help with the key signatures if that's confusing.
The tenor sax always plays a whole tone above concert pitch instruments like the organ. If the organist is playing in C then the tenor sax plays in D. This is because when you play lin key of C on the tenor sax you are playing in Bb concert. So you always have to raise your pitch by a whole tone in order to be in tune with the concert pitch instruments
Concert B-flat and written C are the same thing on a B-flat transposing instrument, such as a clarinet, trumpet, or tenor saxophone.
An alto saxophone is a musical instrument, a member of the saxophone family which is smaller than the tenor saxophone but larger than the soprano saxophone. Its heard range goes from concert pitch Db3 to concert pitch Ab5.
Guitar is in concert A and the tenor saxophone is in Bb, so to transpose music from guitar to tenor saxophone you move up three semitones (A, B, Bb)
Bass>>Tenor>>Alto>>Soprano If you want to get technical there are scales between those 4. For example Baritone sits between Bass and Tenor.
On any instrument, an A major scale has three sharps: F#, C#, and G#. The scale is A, B, C#, D, E, F#, G#, A. If you are asking about a concert A major scale, you'd play a B scale on any Bb instrument, like a tenor sax. Now you've got 5 sharps, and the scale is played B, C#, D#, E, F#, G#, A#, B. It's a knuckle buster.
B flat.
Slide positions for B-flat tenor trombone concert pitch to middle C: C (6th), D(4th), E(2nd), F(1st), G(4th), A(2nd), B(4th), middle C (3rd)
b flat
A note played on tenor sax sounds one full step lower (actually an octave and a step, but you can ignore the octave). Play a C and it sounds like a B-flat. If you want to transpose music written for organ or piano, write the new part one note higher and change the key signature by taking away two flats or adding two sharps. the organist can probably help with the key signatures if that's confusing.
the stuid one
That really depends on the sax. The Alto, Baritone, Tenor, and soprano saxes are all usually in a jazz band together but a soprano is not used in concert band. The alto,tenor,and bari are all in concert band.