Well you gotta finger her nice and easy and when the time is right ya gotta eat it up like it chicken on waffles then when she all wet just stick it in their nice and slow aww yeeeaaa when she is wet enough try to use a couple fingers at the same time yeah buddy!! She wont be able to even stand up;) oh wait you where talking about the instrument sorry
i play the clarinet and it really easy and fun and NO!!! of course the fingerings arent the same!
Take the upper octave fingerings of the B flat clarinet (D in the staff to a D above the staff) and they produce the same notes on the tenor saxophone. On tenor saxophone, you would use the same fingerings for notes regardless of which octave you are in (for example: a D in the staff is the same fingering as a D below the staff) either adding the octave key to make the note higher or lower. The only inconsistencies with no relation between clarinet and tenor are the fingerings for C (middle key in the left hand on tenor) and C sharp (no keys down on tenor) Notes in the octave above the staff are different from clarinet to tenor as well.
Okay this is for double horn... Our e flat scale 2 1 open thumb 23 thumb 1 thumb open thumb 12 thumb 1 hope this helps
Yes, but the buttons and triggers are much smaller
scale: open............1st & 3rd.........1st & 2nd.......1st..........open.......1st & 2nd..........2nd........open arpeggio: open...........1st & 2nd............open............open
i play the clarinet and it really easy and fun and NO!!! of course the fingerings arent the same!
Take the upper octave fingerings of the B flat clarinet (D in the staff to a D above the staff) and they produce the same notes on the tenor saxophone. On tenor saxophone, you would use the same fingerings for notes regardless of which octave you are in (for example: a D in the staff is the same fingering as a D below the staff) either adding the octave key to make the note higher or lower. The only inconsistencies with no relation between clarinet and tenor are the fingerings for C (middle key in the left hand on tenor) and C sharp (no keys down on tenor) Notes in the octave above the staff are different from clarinet to tenor as well.
An Fb scale on the horn is the same as the E scale!! Crazy, huh? Hope this helps!! =)
See the related links section for a link to sheet music with fingerings.
See the related links section for a link to sheet music with fingerings.
23 1 0 123 23 1 0 23
G-flat (2,3) A-flat (1) B-flat (0) C-flat (1,2,3) D-flat (2,3) E-flat (1) F (0) G-flat (2,3)
Concert B-flat and written C are the same thing on a B-flat transposing instrument, such as a clarinet, trumpet, or tenor saxophone.
E flat first, F open, G first and second, A second, B flat open, C first, D open, High E flat First
Okay this is for double horn... Our e flat scale 2 1 open thumb 23 thumb 1 thumb open thumb 12 thumb 1 hope this helps
You don't specify instrument. For piano, you would use: Right Hand: 3 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 Left Hand: 3 2 1 4 3 2 1 3 It depends on the instrument. Fingerings for a trumpet are completely different for a clarinet, for instance. However, the notes for an E-flat major scale are E-flat, F, G, A-flat, B-flat, C, D, E-flat. You finger each note correctly for whatever instrument you are using. It should also be noted that different instruments play in different keys, so an E-flat scale on a piano corresponds to the F scale on a trumpet, or a C scale on an Alto Sax, or a B-flat scale on a French Horn.
Yes, but the buttons and triggers are much smaller