You don't........if you need to make the pitch higher, you buzz a higher note.
The position for high E flat on the trombone is third position. :)
It's B natural 7th position or slightly-flat second with trigger on a tenor trombone, or any Bb (B flat) pitched trombone.
g is in fifth position
2nd position, in all octaves.
A low B(natural) on a Trombone is in the 7th position (a little bit past 6th position) The high one can either be played in that position or 4th position. For a Trombone position chart click on the related link below.
The position for high E flat on the trombone is third position. :)
2nd position
It's B natural 7th position or slightly-flat second with trigger on a tenor trombone, or any Bb (B flat) pitched trombone.
A sharp is effectively a B flat, which is first position on a B flat trombone whether it is low or high.
First position, except for low F, which is sixth position.
g is in fifth position
2nd position, in all octaves.
A low B(natural) on a Trombone is in the 7th position (a little bit past 6th position) The high one can either be played in that position or 4th position. For a Trombone position chart click on the related link below.
E-flat is 3rd position.
it only goes to seventh
It's played in 1st position.
The B-flat major scale for trombone consists of the following positions: 1st position (B♭), 4th position (C), 1st position (D), 4th position (E♭), 1st position (F), 4th position (G), and 2nd position (A). The notes in the scale are B♭, C, D, E♭, F, G, and A, returning to B♭. Trombone players typically use these positions to achieve the correct pitches while playing the scale.