F# minor, which has 3 sharps in the key signature.
Concert b flat is a c.
I think it would be a minor second. D flat to D double flat would be the equivalent of D flat to C.
B-flat can be found in the minor scales of D, G, C, F, B-flat, E-flat, and A-flat (and the obscure but possible D-flat minor).
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.
Every key signature that has flats has a B flat. These keys are: -F Major (Also D Minor and G Dorian) Has only B flat. -B flat Major (Also G Minor and C Dorian) Has B flat and E flat. -E flat Major (Also C Minor and F Dorian) Has B flat, E flat, and A flat. -A flat Major (Also F Minor and B flat Dorian) Has B flat, E flat, A flat, and D flat. -D flat Major (Also B flat Minor and E flat Dorian) Has B flat, E flat, A flat, D flat, and G flat. -G flat Major (Also E flat Minor and A flat Dorian) Has B flat, E flat, A flat, D flat, G flat, and C flat. -C flat Mojor (Also A flat Minor and D flat Dorian) Has B flat, E flat, A flat, D flat, G flat, C flat, and F flat.
If you drop a grand piano down a mine shaft you would get a flat minor.
If you drop a grand piano down a mine shaft you would get a flat minor.
The B scale begins at D and has five flats. The E flat minor scale begins at F and has one flat.
Weber wrote two clarinet concertos, Clarinet Concerto No. 1 in F minor and Clarinet Concerto No. 2 in E-flat major.
No but it is the same as the trumpet & piano(Afgncaap8 disagrees, saying that clarinet music isdifferent from flute, and that it is the same as trumpet, but the clarinet has different music than the piano! The piano is a C instrument, whereas the typical trumpet and clarinet tend to be tuned to B-flat. However, usually the flute and the piano are both tuned to C, so their music could be the same.)
The piano is a "C" instrument, meaning when it plays a C you hear a C. The clarinet is a "B-flat" instrument which means when a clarinet plays a "C" is sounds a "B-flat." I know this sounds confusing and the easiest thing you can do is play, rewrite the clarinet notes a whole step higher than the piano part.
On a piano, minor keys can also be called flat keys
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
F, G, A flat, B flat, C, D flat, E flat, F.
C. A. Gibbs has written: 'Three pieces for B flat clarinet and piano'
Play these keys: C, E flat, G to get a C minor chord.
No, they do not. When a clarinet player plays a "C" it actually sounds a "B-flat". The two instruments can play together if the clarinet part is written a whole step higher than the piano part.