Fb would be the same as E natural, so it would be open.
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. =)
An Fb scale on the horn is the same as the E scale!! Crazy, huh? Hope this helps!! =)
The French horn is built so that it sounds in the key of F. If a hornist's music says to play a middle C, it will be the same pitch as an F below middle C on the piano. If a piece of music is writen in Concert F, a C-instrument, such as a trombone, will have one flat (B flat) in his or her key signature while a hornist will have no sharps or flats.
The correct scale for concert pitch C on a tenor horn is a C major.
I'm assuming you're asking about a concert-pitched Bb scale. Otherwise, if you're thinking about horn pitch, you'd start on a Bb. xD To find the horn pitch from concert pitch, you go up a fifth or down a fourth. I normally go up, so it would Bb-C-D-Eb-F!! Hope this helps! =)
Okay this is for double horn... Our e flat scale 2 1 open thumb 23 thumb 1 thumb open thumb 12 thumb 1 hope this helps
Mellophone has a concert B flat note tuned to F. Besides mellophone, the trumpet or fluglehorn are the closest.
The French horn is an F instrument. That means when a middle C is played on the horn, it sounds the same as an F a fifth below middle C on the piano.
A French horn is most likely to be found in a concert band or a brass band, although there are jazz bands with French horns. French horn is in its element, however, in a symphony orchestra.
no
If on an F horn, you finger D flat with the first and second valves.
Same as B-flat.