If you have a single horn, it's fingers 1 and 2 for A natural, and fingers 2 and 3 for A flat. If you have a double horn, you can add the thumb key to open the B flat side of the horn.
Thumb
Open. no valve pressed down.
E# is the same as F natural, so it would be the first valve only. E# and F natural are in-harmonic, which means they are the same note, just written differently.
Has to do with your lips and the emboucher ... that is how close or far apart the lips are when blowing.
Go here: http://boerger.org/horn/finger_only.shtml
Thumb
Open. no valve pressed down.
1)Get a fingering chart 2)buzz mouthpiece 3)make music
E# is the same as F natural, so it would be the first valve only. E# and F natural are in-harmonic, which means they are the same note, just written differently.
Has to do with your lips and the emboucher ... that is how close or far apart the lips are when blowing.
Go here: http://boerger.org/horn/finger_only.shtml
Both have their trouble areas. With trombone, it's all about developing muscle memory to find the correct slide positions. With horn, what gets tricky is close partials in the overtone series, where the same fingering can be used for many notes, or one note can be played several different ways.
"B" Sharp
1st valve or open with the thumb valve. its a concert Bb
To learn beginner French horn notes effectively, practice regularly, use a fingering chart, focus on proper embouchure and breath support, start with simple melodies, and seek guidance from a music teacher.
An enharmonic note is a note that has two names but have the same fingering
Any note can be a half note, as long as it is held for two full counts. This applies to any instrument.