To play F sharp on the Alto Saxophone, press down the first finger of your left hand on the top key while keeping the rest of your fingers relaxed. This will produce the F sharp note.
To play F sharp on the alto saxophone, you typically use the following fingering: Press down the first, second, and third fingers of your left hand, and the first and second fingers of your right hand.
To play the F alto saxophone more effectively, focus on proper posture and breath control, practice regularly to improve finger dexterity, work on tone production and intonation, and study music theory to understand the music you are playing better.
Hi! Im Kitty_1616! I play the alto sax anbd I know almost all scales. So..... The notes to the A minor Harmonic scale are: * A * B * C * D * E * F * G sharp * A The notes for the A minor Melodic scale GOING UP are: * A * B * C * D * F SHARP * G SHARP * A Going down, the F & G are not sharped. Glad I could help you! Kitty_1616 Hi! Im Kitty_1616! I play the alto sax anbd I know almost all scales. So..... The notes to the A minor Harmonic scale are: * A * B * C * D * E * F * G sharp * A The notes for the A minor Melodic scale GOING UP are: * A * B * C * D * F SHARP * G SHARP * A Going down, the F & G are not sharped. Glad I could help you! Kitty_1616
On C instruments (flute, piccolo, oboe, bassoon, low brass, all strings), concert F is their written F. On B-flat instruments (clarinet, bass clarinet, soprano and tenor saxophone, trumpet/cornet), concert F is written G. On F instruments (English horn, F horn), concert F is written C. On E-flat instruments (alto and baritone saxophone, alto clarinet), concert F is written D. On A instruments (A clarinet, piccolo trumpet), concert F is written A-flat. On G instruments (alto flute, G bugle), concert F is written B-flat.
The notes in a B5 chord would eliminate the the D sharp note and just play the B and the F sharp
To play F sharp on the alto saxophone, you typically use the following fingering: Press down the first, second, and third fingers of your left hand, and the first and second fingers of your right hand.
It is in the key of concert Bb. On alto saxophone there is one sharp (F#). There is a link to the sheet music for it in the related links, which includes both piano and alto saxophone.
F# = top 3 fingers down. and the middle key on the bottom 3 fingers.
To play an F on a alto saxophone, you must play a G and then (if you know your fingering correctly) you play the key that your pointer finger of your right hand is on.If you have any questions at all, message me!
A typical alto saxophone can reach a B-flat one octave lower than its natural octave and a high F-natural (sometimes F-sharp) one octave higher than its natural octave. So some notes that can be played are A-flat, B-natural, and G-sharp, which are all in the alto saxophone's natural octave.
F, g, a, b flat, c, d, e, f
I play F E D All natural
An alto sax can play from a low Bb to a high F/F# depending on whether or not you have the key, some don't
The Mario theme tune is a very distinctive piece of music. You could learn it on the alto sax by looking up the sheet music.
For an E on the alto saxophone, you need to have your first, second, and third fingers down on your left hand, and your first and second fingers down on your right hand. If you want low E, leave it like this, if you want high E, then add the octave key.
The Front F key is the topmost left hand key and is pressed by the first finger. It was designed to provide an altissimo fingering for F6 as an alternate to using the palm keys.
i can tell you the basics :) First you play Gx5 then BflaTx4 then F natural once then D sharp x4 then D x1 then C x5 then ocer and over and you got the melody!