Piccolo clarinet From the smallest to the biggest, here it is: ~ Soprano clarinet ~ Basset clarinet ~ Basset horn ~ Alto clarinet ~ Bass clarinet ~ Contra-alto clarinet ~ Contrabass clarinet
On a standard Bb trumpet, the fingering for a bottom-line Eb is 12 and the fingering for all higher Ebs is 2.
Yes, they do. It is the length of the instrument that determines the pitch differences. For example the bass clarinet sounds an octave lower than the B-flat clarinet; the shorter E-flat soprano clarinet sounds a fifth higher than the B-flat.
This website has the answer. http://www.woodwind.org/clarinet/Study/FingeringCharts/bbfinger.html
The main tune notes are as follows: E, D#, E, D#, E, B, D, C, A, (pause) B, D, F, A, (pause) E, G#, B, C For a finger guide you may want to search 'clarinet fingering' in Google images and the sheet music can also be found through Google.
The same fingering as b flat
Piccolo clarinet From the smallest to the biggest, here it is: ~ Soprano clarinet ~ Basset clarinet ~ Basset horn ~ Alto clarinet ~ Bass clarinet ~ Contra-alto clarinet ~ Contrabass clarinet
The clarinet family includes the regular clarinet, a smaller version that is still straight called the E-flat clarinet, and then several larger ones that have bends or curves in them, including (in size order) the alto clarinet, the bass clarinet, the contra-alto or E-flat contrabass, and the B-flat contrabass. A soprano saxophone looks somewhat like a metal clarinet, and has a single-reed mouthpiece like the clarinet, but it is part of the saxophone family, not the clarinet family - the bore of the instrument and the fingering system are entirely different from the clarinets.
On a standard Bb trumpet, the fingering for a bottom-line Eb is 12 and the fingering for all higher Ebs is 2.
b flat
Yes, they do. It is the length of the instrument that determines the pitch differences. For example the bass clarinet sounds an octave lower than the B-flat clarinet; the shorter E-flat soprano clarinet sounds a fifth higher than the B-flat.
There is no "F-Flat", it's E-Natural (second valve)
This website has the answer. http://www.woodwind.org/clarinet/Study/FingeringCharts/bbfinger.html
The main tune notes are as follows: E, D#, E, D#, E, B, D, C, A, (pause) B, D, F, A, (pause) E, G#, B, C For a finger guide you may want to search 'clarinet fingering' in Google images and the sheet music can also be found through Google.
E flat
Some E-flat instruments include the alto clarinet, sopranino saxophone, alto saxophone, baritone saxophone, contralto clarinet, and the tenor horn. There is even an E-flat tuba, but it's not regularly used.
Get a fingering chart.