High G uses an open fingering.
It depends on which D. The D on the bottom space, the only fingering is 1-3. D on the 2nd line down from the top, the fingerings are 1 or 1-3. D above that, there are a couple of alternates, but I can't recall them right off hand.
All open, or 1st and 3rd for the G below the staff.
You play a G below the staff on the trumpet with the fingering 1 and 3, loosen the jaw if you are having trouble reaching it.
The play the note 'A' on trumpet, we use the valve combination 1+2. The top A in the staff is sometimes out of tune, and for that we use an alternate fingering that just consists of third valve alone.
A double-sharped note is just raised two half-steps from the original note. So if you have A##, the first sharp would go to A#, which is the same as B-flat, and the second sharp would be the A##, which is the same as B-natural.
It depends on which D. The D on the bottom space, the only fingering is 1-3. D on the 2nd line down from the top, the fingerings are 1 or 1-3. D above that, there are a couple of alternates, but I can't recall them right off hand.
Thats about when i started playing above the staff, some of my class mates were playing above the staff in 7th grade, it all depends on the skill level of the player
All open, or 1st and 3rd for the G below the staff.
1 and 2 for the one on the bottom of the staff open for the one on top
You play a G below the staff on the trumpet with the fingering 1 and 3, loosen the jaw if you are having trouble reaching it.
The play the note 'A' on trumpet, we use the valve combination 1+2. The top A in the staff is sometimes out of tune, and for that we use an alternate fingering that just consists of third valve alone.
A double-sharped note is just raised two half-steps from the original note. So if you have A##, the first sharp would go to A#, which is the same as B-flat, and the second sharp would be the A##, which is the same as B-natural.
"A" one ledger line above the staff is first and second valve.
the G 1 line above the the bottom of the staff is open along with the one 1 space above the staff and the one 3 spaces below the staff is 1st and 3nd you are probably talking about the G on the staff(no fingers)
The first open note above a low G: CThe first open note above the G on the staff: CThe first open note above the G above the staff: A
The range of a trumpet is determined by the skill of the player. Some players can play up to a C above the staff, but many, many can play much higher than that.
A sharp is also known as B flat. A sharp in the staff is Left: T 1 Right: 1. There is also an alternate fingering Left: left Thumb key and 1. Same fingering for A sharp above the staff. High A sharp is Left: T Right: 1 and first trill key (small keys between the normal 1-2 and 2-3).