For clarinet, the notes for the Concert F scale (Clarinet G) are as follows: G A B C D E F# G
It depends on which instrument.
Concert B-flat and written C are the same thing on a B-flat transposing instrument, such as a clarinet, trumpet, or tenor saxophone.
c d e f g a b c
Concert b flat is a c.
For clarinet, the notes for the Concert F scale (Clarinet G) are as follows: G A B C D E F# G
A Bb concert scale goes CDEFGABCBAGFEDC. All the notes are natural. Start on middle C with just three fingers on your left hand down.
C d e f g a b
Concert C is D Major so it goes D, E, #F, G, A, B, #C, D. The arpeggio is D, #F, A, D.
It depends on which instrument.
Concert B-flat and written C are the same thing on a B-flat transposing instrument, such as a clarinet, trumpet, or tenor saxophone.
c d e f g a b c
The key of D major has two sharps: F and C. There are three possible octave for the D scale on the clarinet. The notes to play are: D - E - F# - G - A - B - C# - D.
The only instruments I can think of that can be tuned to a C would be clarinet and trumpet. Most tuning notes are a Concert Bb. Concert notes are different on almost any instrument.
If you play the notes of a major chord one at a time you are playing an arpeggio. The notes of the A Major chord are A-C#-E-A. Two Octave Arpeggio for Clarinet (Ascending) A-C#-E-A-C#-E-A (Decending) A-E-C#-A-E-C#-A
F, G, A, Bb, C, D, E and F.
Concert pitch or instrument pitch? The dominant 7th in the key of A is E G# B D, but that's concert pitch. If the orchestra is in A, the clarinet is in B, and the dominant 7th would be F# A# C# E.