A person can find sheet music at a music store. They can also find sheet music at a school store, or a store that sells instruments to the population.
The flute is a woodwind instrument and usually plays the tune in orchestras or other musical groups. The flute plays in the treble clef in the key of C which is the same key as the piano. This means that a flute player can usually play the top line of a piano's music if necessary. (You don't have to transpose piano music into flute music either as it is in the same key!)
Piano, violin, flute
Ato Turkson has written: 'Three pieces for flute and piano [by] Turkson' -- subject(s): Flute and piano music
No, the piano has a much larger range than the flute. Both are in the same key, but you'd have to transpose everything below middle c and the flute can't play chords.
the code is key .. if you meant the piano in the stage, get the sheet music from the pizza parlor and put it on the piano
I play the flute, and I just play things from piano music. Try it! You could just google piano music for any song (if there's piano). Sorry, that's all i can think of.
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.)
Peter Lawson has written: 'Momenta 94, for solo piano' -- subject(s): Piano music 'Valentia extramaterial' -- subject(s): Quartets (Piano, flute, percussion), Sextets (Piano, flute, percussion)
Go to any instrumental music store and look at the piano music section. Many music stores offer simple books for children learning how to play piano and read sheet music. If there is a book on children's songs, purchase that. Flute is written in the same key (C) as piano, so you will probably have no trouble reading the music.
George Barati has written: 'Two preludes for piano (1943)' -- subject(s): Piano music 'Two piano pieces (1948)' -- subject(s): Piano music 'Quartet for harpsichord, flute (and alto flute), oboe (English horn), double bass (or violoncello)' -- subject(s): Quartets (Harpsichord, flute, oboe, double bass)
it is the same and yuo do not need to change it (weird question )
This depends on the player. Some will find one easier than the other. Some find them equally challenging.Flute music is usually easier to read, however; because the flute can only play one note at a time. Piano, of course, can play many notes at a time.Well, it really does depend on the player and on which kind of music they like better. Let's say that the flute and the piano are equally challenging, but I like to play the flute. And let's say that I play the piano...I would obviously think that it was hard. However, if i was playing the flute, i would probably think that it was fun and easy.The advantage is that if you already knew how to play the piano, and you want to learn how to play the flute, it'll be really easy because you already know all the notes! Good luck, everyone!