The correct fingering for playing an F flat note on the piano is to use your thumb (1st finger) on the white key directly to the left of the F key.
The difference in sound between playing a sharp and a B flat on a musical instrument is that a sharp note is slightly higher in pitch than a B flat note.
To play a B flat note on the piano, you would press the key that is located to the left of the B key. This key produces a lower pitch than the regular B key. Playing a B flat on a different instrument, such as a trumpet or clarinet, involves using a specific fingering or valve combination to produce the same pitch as the B flat on the piano.
E-flat can also be D-sharp, F-sharp can be G-flat, and A-flat can be G-sharp
To read sharp and flat notes effectively, remember that a sharp raises a note by a half step and a flat lowers a note by a half step. Pay attention to the key signature at the beginning of the piece to know which notes are consistently sharp or flat. Practice identifying and playing these notes to improve your fluency in reading music.
d sharp right above middle C is the same as Eb -- 2/3; the D sharp above that is 2.
On a standard Bb trumpet, the fingering for Ab is 23.
On a standard Bb trumpet, the fingering for a bottom-line Eb is 12 and the fingering for all higher Ebs is 2.
playing flat and sharp notes is easy . it is not different than playng any other notes, you just have to learn the fingering. for instance B is played pressing the middle valve. for B Flat press 1st valve. open any trumpet book - its there. you may also find it with other trumpet techniques. Danny Carney - www.playthetrumpet.com
2nd and 3rd valve
On a standard Bb Trumpet, the fingering for a low Eb is 23 and the fingering for higher Ebs is 2.
it is the first valve
1 and 3
It would be the same an F sharp. So just the middle valve.
Same as B-flat.
A concert F sharp (as played on a piano) is a C on an E flat alto sax.
On a b-flat trumpet, A sharp is played with the first valve, same same as B flat.