a bcd cdba cd ab
a bb add ccccccccccccaddd
Bb isnt what you think it is it is actually B flat.
For the Bb clarinet it's G B flat A D. All of course the high notes, but not super high
g g f f Bb a c c e d d
well pio po pju it is a bb a bb ac a f# g g g g g g f
Bb, C, D, Eb, F, G, and your major seventh is A.
Middle G (x5), high Bb, Middle A, Middle G, F#(x5), Middle A, Middle G, F#, Middle G (x4), Middle G, High Bb, Middle A, middle g, f#, middle g, middle a, f#, middle g (x2). NOTE: All of these are eighth notes besides the last 2 (the 2 g's) ~A Clarinet Player :)~
The clarinet has 24 notes
The primary difference between an Eb clarinet and a Bb clarinet lies in their pitch and transposition. The Eb clarinet is a smaller instrument that sounds a minor sixth higher than written, while the Bb clarinet sounds a whole step lower than written. This means that when a player reads a C on the Bb clarinet, it sounds as a Bb, whereas the same written C on the Eb clarinet sounds as an Eb. Additionally, they have different uses in orchestras and band settings, with the Bb clarinet being more common in concert bands and orchestras.
Anton Stadler was a clarinettist in Mozart's time. He dedicated Clarinet Concerto in A for Stadler. The original composition was written to a special clarinet that could play lower notes than the modern clarinet in Bb.
Bb