1, open, 1-2, 1, open, 1, open, 1.
Take the upper octave fingerings of the B flat clarinet (D in the staff to a D above the staff) and they produce the same notes on the tenor saxophone. On tenor saxophone, you would use the same fingerings for notes regardless of which octave you are in (for example: a D in the staff is the same fingering as a D below the staff) either adding the octave key to make the note higher or lower. The only inconsistencies with no relation between clarinet and tenor are the fingerings for C (middle key in the left hand on tenor) and C sharp (no keys down on tenor) Notes in the octave above the staff are different from clarinet to tenor as well.
Threr are eight notes in an octave. Octo- means eight in Latin and so in the words of Ltin origin For example, in the following words: octopus - eight arms octogon - eight sides octogenarian - eighty years old
Good upper posture for holding the flute, lots of air for playing, ability to manipulate embouchure, and resilience.
Theoretically, the range of the trumpet is limited only by the person playing it. However, for a typical trumpet player, the lower end of the range is the F#/Gb below Low C (Concert Bb). The upper range of the trumpet is as high as you can play, but most trumpet players can reach High C (two octaves above low C) relatively comfortably with practice.
That's a difficult question to answer. A lot of trumpet players can play really high notes. The highest I've ever heard was a man named Mark van Cleave. He played a C4 (that's two octaves above high C) and a then kept going about another half octave.
G is open, you have no holes down. E has your left thumb on the hole on the bottom and your left index finger on the first hole on top. for D, you take E, and put your left middle finger down on the next hole. For C, you take D and put your left ring finger down on the next hole, no pinkies on any of them.for the upper octave, you need to first locate the "octave key". the octave key is that long bar on the bottom of the clarinet next to the only hole. it ends in a tear drop shape. you must hold this key down while playing to play the upper octave.**the fingering in the upper octave is NOT the same as in the lower octave.C is all fingers down (except your left pinky). your right pinky will go on the second bar down, at the veiw when you are playing it: (the
Take the upper octave fingerings of the B flat clarinet (D in the staff to a D above the staff) and they produce the same notes on the tenor saxophone. On tenor saxophone, you would use the same fingerings for notes regardless of which octave you are in (for example: a D in the staff is the same fingering as a D below the staff) either adding the octave key to make the note higher or lower. The only inconsistencies with no relation between clarinet and tenor are the fingerings for C (middle key in the left hand on tenor) and C sharp (no keys down on tenor) Notes in the octave above the staff are different from clarinet to tenor as well.
c c d c f e c c d c g f c c C a f e d Bb Bb a f g f The upper case C is an octave higher and the "Bb" is B flat.
It's a slang term for playing in the extreme upper range
There is no limit.
Threr are eight notes in an octave. Octo- means eight in Latin and so in the words of Ltin origin For example, in the following words: octopus - eight arms octogon - eight sides octogenarian - eighty years old
Good upper posture for holding the flute, lots of air for playing, ability to manipulate embouchure, and resilience.
Theoretically, the range of the trumpet is limited only by the person playing it. However, for a typical trumpet player, the lower end of the range is the F#/Gb below Low C (Concert Bb). The upper range of the trumpet is as high as you can play, but most trumpet players can reach High C (two octaves above low C) relatively comfortably with practice.
it is 5 crore
That's a difficult question to answer. A lot of trumpet players can play really high notes. The highest I've ever heard was a man named Mark van Cleave. He played a C4 (that's two octaves above high C) and a then kept going about another half octave.
With your left hand (upper) press the first three fingers. For a high C add the octave key with your left hand thumb.
The Conn 1050B is a brass trumpet (1050B-SP for silver plate) for the upper level student. List price is $845. A used 1050B in good condition would sell for $350-$550.