The whole steps are like white-white-white but the half steps are white-blue-white. So as you can see two whole steps higher than G is B.
Piano, because it can go higher and lower than a guitar.
'Re' is the next step.
It should be tuned to 444Hz. Slightly higher than the perfect 440. This is what professional orchestras tune into. In fact, the whole orchestra tunes to 444Hz when a piano soloist is going to play. It does make the difference in sound!
The piano is a "C" instrument, meaning when it plays a C you hear a C. The clarinet is a "B-flat" instrument which means when a clarinet plays a "C" is sounds a "B-flat." I know this sounds confusing and the easiest thing you can do is play, rewrite the clarinet notes a whole step higher than the piano part.
No, they do not. When a clarinet player plays a "C" it actually sounds a "B-flat". The two instruments can play together if the clarinet part is written a whole step higher than the piano part.
B
To play a B on the piano, locate the key that is one half step higher than B. This key is the same as B because B is the enharmonic equivalent of C. Press that key to play a B on the piano.
Piano, because it can go higher and lower than a guitar.
To play a sharp on the piano, simply locate the key that is one half step higher than the natural note. Press that key to play the sharp note. Sharps are indicated by a "" symbol before the note name.
'Re' is the next step.
It should be tuned to 444Hz. Slightly higher than the perfect 440. This is what professional orchestras tune into. In fact, the whole orchestra tunes to 444Hz when a piano soloist is going to play. It does make the difference in sound!
The piano is a "C" instrument, meaning when it plays a C you hear a C. The clarinet is a "B-flat" instrument which means when a clarinet plays a "C" is sounds a "B-flat." I know this sounds confusing and the easiest thing you can do is play, rewrite the clarinet notes a whole step higher than the piano part.
F#
B is half a tone higher than B flat
A is one half-step higher than A-flat.
To play a flat on the piano, you simply press the key that is one half step lower than the natural key. This lowers the pitch of the note by a semitone.
A piano has 12 notes on it. The notes (keys) are from A - G. Each note can be a flat or a sharp. Each note will either be higher or lower in pitch than the one being played. If you played Middle C on the piano and then played the next key on the right (which would be a D if going one full step up) it would be slightly higher in pitch.