On a typical Flute, 'low' g requires the left hand thumb to close the hole at the back of the flute, and the 1st, 2nd and 3rd fingers of the the left hand close all the upper holes just above it. This means that all the holes controlled by the left hand are closed. All the holes controlled by the right hand are open.
left hand: thumb, pointer, middle, ring
right hand: ring, pinkie
A flute fingering chart will give the fingerings (a comprehensive one will also give alternatives) for the flute.
Easy you just take an saxaphone music book and a flute book and then at the back of the book you should see the fingering notes and they should be in order from lowest note to highest and the first note shown in the saxaphone book should be the same note in the flute book meaning they sound the same and all you have to do is look at the first,second,third,etc. note in the saxaphone book and look at the first,second,third,etc. in the flute book at translate the saxaphone to the flute.
F G A F G A C Bb A G that's about half :D
the player changer his/her ambisher and changes the fingering on it
High G uses an open fingering.
The same as f# depending on the instrument.
G Just the 2nd note?? Weird...
A flute fingering chart will give the fingerings (a comprehensive one will also give alternatives) for the flute.
On a standard Bb trumpet the fingering for a high G is open. An alternate fingering is 13.
On a standard Bb trumpet, the fingering for low G is 13 and the fingering for higher Gs is open.
Easy you just take an saxaphone music book and a flute book and then at the back of the book you should see the fingering notes and they should be in order from lowest note to highest and the first note shown in the saxaphone book should be the same note in the flute book meaning they sound the same and all you have to do is look at the first,second,third,etc. note in the saxaphone book and look at the first,second,third,etc. in the flute book at translate the saxaphone to the flute.
J. L. Voorhees has written: 'The classification of flute fingering systems of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries' -- subject(s): Fingering, Flute, History 'The Development of Woodwind Fingering Systems in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries'
F G A F G A C Bb A G that's about half :D
the player changer his/her ambisher and changes the fingering on it
High G uses an open fingering.
First key back key and pinky key
Get a fingering chart.