playing flat and sharp notes is easy . it is not different than playng any other notes, you just have to learn the fingering. for instance B is played pressing the middle valve. for B Flat press 1st valve. open any Trumpet book - its there. you may also find it with other trumpet techniques. Danny Carney - www.playthetrumpet.com
how to play sharp and flat notes on recorder
Assuming the guitar music is written for a standard guitar with no capo, and assuming you are playing on a B-flat trumpet, you transpose up a full step. So, if the guitar note is C, you play a D on a b-flat trumpet. If you are playing on a C trumpet, you don't have to transpose.
The piano is a C instrument. The trumpet is a B flat instrument. Thus, to transpose piano notes to trumpet notes, you have to put each note up one whole step. If piano -> trumpet: A -> B B flat -> C B -> C sharp C -> D C sharp -> D sharp D -> E E flat -> F E -> F sharp F -> G F sharp -> G sharp G -> A A flat -> B flat Hope that helped!
you look at the notes and play them
You can't It depends on what you mean. The B-flat trumpet plays one full tone below concert pitch, so to make the tone match, you must play one step higher. In other words, a C on the piano is a D on the trumpet. Chords work the same way. A C chord on the piano is a D chord on the trumpet. However, the trumpet can play only one note at a time, so a single trumpet cannot play a chord, but can play single notes of the chord.
To play a sharp B flat on a trumpet, you would use the first valve and the third valve together.
how to play sharp and flat notes on recorder
how do you play fireflies by owl city on trumpet with the notes on a staff
The notes to play on the piano for the keyword "moonlight sonata" are E-flat, C-sharp, and A.
hey i play Trumpet to but i don't know the notes sorry
Assuming the guitar music is written for a standard guitar with no capo, and assuming you are playing on a B-flat trumpet, you transpose up a full step. So, if the guitar note is C, you play a D on a b-flat trumpet. If you are playing on a C trumpet, you don't have to transpose.
A,B,C,D, B flat, B sharp, and B natural.
They play every notes, not just flat notes.
Middle C, D, E flat, F, G, E flat, G (rest) F sharp, D, F sharp, F, C sharp, F Next you repeat the first 7 notes (without the rest) then play C (one octave higher), B flat, G, E flat, G, B flat.
-------- A - 2nd A flat/G sharp - 3rd G - 4th -------- F - 1st F sharp/G Flat - 5th E - 2nd E flat/D sharp - 3rd -------- D - 4th D Flat/C sharp - 5th C - 6th -------- B - 7th B Flat/A Sharp - 1st A - 2nd A Flat/G sharp - 3rd -------- G - 4th
The lowest natural note is low F sharp. You can play lower by using pedal tone notes or by moving all the slides out.
The piano is a C instrument. The trumpet is a B flat instrument. Thus, to transpose piano notes to trumpet notes, you have to put each note up one whole step. If piano -> trumpet: A -> B B flat -> C B -> C sharp C -> D C sharp -> D sharp D -> E E flat -> F E -> F sharp F -> G F sharp -> G sharp G -> A A flat -> B flat Hope that helped!