You can use a search engine with the key words: sheet music flute can-can And that will show you images of the sheet music. Most of the flute part can be played exactly as-is on the recorder; a few bars may have to be transposed down an octave.
The KEY of the alto sax and baritone sax is in Eb. The Tenor is in Bb
C'' - an octave above middle C. For convenience written music for the descant (or soprano) recorder is usually wrtten an octave lower. See also http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recorder#Types_of_recorder
An interval of eight notes is known as an octave.
No, it's a diminished octave. There is no such thing as a minor octave.
You can use a search engine with the key words: sheet music flute can-can And that will show you images of the sheet music. Most of the flute part can be played exactly as-is on the recorder; a few bars may have to be transposed down an octave.
The KEY of the alto sax and baritone sax is in Eb. The Tenor is in Bb
C'' - an octave above middle C. For convenience written music for the descant (or soprano) recorder is usually wrtten an octave lower. See also http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recorder#Types_of_recorder
An interval of eight notes is known as an octave.
I played an octave on the piano.
No, it's a diminished octave. There is no such thing as a minor octave.
Eight notes in an octave.
There are 8 notes in an octave.
There is no antonym of octave. What could it refer to?
The second octave of 200 Hz is 400 Hz. In music theory, each octave represents a doubling of the frequency of the previous octave.
octave is the name of a particular interval size
An octave is exactly 8 notes apart, so that each note comprising the octave is the same (eg an octave could be from C to C). The word "octave" is based on the root "octo", meaning 8.