It's played in 1st position.
1st position and lots of air.
Eb is in 3rd position and E(natural) is in 2nd position, and the next note up from an E(natural), instead of being an E#, is an F(natural), and that is in the first position. An E# is an F(natural Also, Cb is B(natural) Click the related link below for a slide position chart.
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.
The trombone is pitched in concert C, but this is undoubtedly not the most common key. Usually, any band trombonist will play often in Bb, but as the musician matures any key is possible. Orchestras are fond of sharp keys, especially A or G.
Use 2nd position and lots of air.
E-flat is 3rd position.
A sharp is effectively a B flat, which is first position on a B flat trombone whether it is low or high.
It's played in 1st position.
1st position and lots of air.
The B-flat major scale for trombone consists of the following positions: 1st position (B♭), 4th position (C), 1st position (D), 4th position (E♭), 1st position (F), 4th position (G), and 2nd position (A). The notes in the scale are B♭, C, D, E♭, F, G, and A, returning to B♭. Trombone players typically use these positions to achieve the correct pitches while playing the scale.
Eb is in 3rd position and E(natural) is in 2nd position, and the next note up from an E(natural), instead of being an E#, is an F(natural), and that is in the first position. An E# is an F(natural Also, Cb is B(natural) Click the related link below for a slide position chart.
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.
2nd position
The trombone is pitched in concert C, but this is undoubtedly not the most common key. Usually, any band trombonist will play often in Bb, but as the musician matures any key is possible. Orchestras are fond of sharp keys, especially A or G.
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.
For the A flat minor scale on the trombone, the positions are as follows: start with the 6th position for the note A♭, then move to 4th position for B♭, 5th position for C♭, 6th position for D♭, 5th position for E♭, 4th position for F♭, and finally back to 6th position for G♭. The scale consists of the notes A♭, B♭, C♭, D♭, E♭, F♭, and G♭.