the fingering for f natural on a Trumpet is first valve. that's it, nothing else. you shouldn't need to pull out your third valve slide or anything like that. just push in the first valve and you;re good to go.
Low D natural (middle of the bass clef) on Trombone is 4th, medium is 1st, high is 1, 3 or 4
1st position, on a standard tenor trombone.
7 5 3 2 5 3 1 4
2nd position which is E or f flat.
1st position.
An A is second position in every octave.
Trombones don't have fingerings because they don't have valves. Instead, they have slide positions. The positions for the B major scale, starting on a 2nd line B and ascending are 7, 5, 3, 2, 5, 3, 1, 4.
The slide positions for the A Major scale, starting on low A, are as follows: A - 2 B - 7 C#- 5 D - 4 E - 2 F#- 5 G#- 3 A - 2
Slide positions for a B-flat major scale.
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.
Slide positions for B-flat tenor trombone concert pitch to middle C: C (6th), D(4th), E(2nd), F(1st), G(4th), A(2nd), B(4th), middle C (3rd)
7,5,3,2,5,3,1,4
The notes and positions for A-sharp are exactly the same as for B-flat.
For the B flat scale which is the most common for beginners: 1 6 4 3 1 4 2 1
Trombones don't have fingerings because they don't have valves. Instead, they have slide positions. The positions for the B major scale, starting on a 2nd line B and ascending are 7, 5, 3, 2, 5, 3, 1, 4.
The slide positions for the A Major scale, starting on low A, are as follows: A - 2 B - 7 C#- 5 D - 4 E - 2 F#- 5 G#- 3 A - 2
The slide positions for the A Major scale, starting on low A, are as follows: A - 2 B - 7 C#- 5 D - 4 E - 2 F#- 5 G#- 3 A - 2
Slide positions for a B-flat major scale.
1, 6, 4, 3, 1, 4, 2, 1 (thats going from low Bb to high Bb)
1 6(T1) 4 3 1 4 2 1 2 4 1 3 4 6 1
c natural ... what gread are you in???
first, sixth, fourth, third, first, fourth, second, first, and then back down if you want really high notes: 1,3,1,3,1,2,2,1 and back down (know that the high G in 2 is really out of tune so you will need to pull in) For a trigger horn: 1st(B flat), trigger-1st(C), 4th(D), 3rd(E flat), 1st(F), 4th(G), 2nd(A natural), 1st(B flat)
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.