A B-flat Clarinet would play its E-flat scale if the director states that the pitch is D-flat concert.
Concert d-flat is played as e-flat on the clarinet. To transpose any note from concert pitch, simply raise it one whole step; the result is the note you should play on a standard b-flat clarinet to match the concert pitch.
On the B-flat clarinet, a concert D is the lowest note.
A concert b flat is a c on the clarinet, and chromatic means moving upwards by half-steps. Therefore: C, C#, D, D#, E, F, F#, G, G#, A, A#, B
B flat concert means when a concert b flat is played, the concert pitched instruments finger a b flat and thats what comes out. For an alto saxophone to play a concert b flat, it must finger a g for a b flat to come out. a trumpet and clarinet has to finger a c.
It depends on the instrument. For example, on a B-flat clarinet it starts on a C the d e f g a B (natural) high c and then you come down, same with the trumpet. Flutes and pianos are in concert pitch, so they start on a B-flat.
Concert C is the clarinet's written D, so the notes for the major scale are D E F# G A B C# D
Concert d-flat is played as e-flat on the clarinet. To transpose any note from concert pitch, simply raise it one whole step; the result is the note you should play on a standard b-flat clarinet to match the concert pitch.
For clarinet, the notes for the Concert F scale (Clarinet G) are as follows: G A B C D E F# G
On the B-flat clarinet, a concert D is the lowest note.
E
D
A concert b flat is a c on the clarinet, and chromatic means moving upwards by half-steps. Therefore: C, C#, D, D#, E, F, F#, G, G#, A, A#, B
B flat concert means when a concert b flat is played, the concert pitched instruments finger a b flat and thats what comes out. For an alto saxophone to play a concert b flat, it must finger a g for a b flat to come out. a trumpet and clarinet has to finger a c.
The B scale begins at D and has five flats. The E flat minor scale begins at F and has one flat.
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.
Bb C D Eb F G A Bb
It depends on the instrument. For example, on a B-flat clarinet it starts on a C the d e f g a B (natural) high c and then you come down, same with the trumpet. Flutes and pianos are in concert pitch, so they start on a B-flat.