A "concert" note refers to the sound that an instrument will make when the note C is fingered. Clarinets and trumpets are concert Bb instruments. A Saxophone is a concert Eb instrument.
This question makes no sense the way it is phrased since concert tuning refers to the relationship between what you will hear when C instruments play a C and what other instruments will sound like.
What do you mean by a scale sheet? Are you trying to ask how the sound of the note C relates to another tone?
Concert C is the clarinet's written D, so the notes for the major scale are D E F# G A B C# D
c d e f g a b c
Concert B-flat and written C are the same thing on a B-flat transposing instrument, such as a clarinet, trumpet, or tenor saxophone.
D major is D E F# G A B C# D.
All 7 notes are flatted in the Cb Major scale. The Cb Major scale is enharmonic to the B Major scale and that scale has 5 sharps.(F.C,G,D,E). If you compare the 2 scales you will notice they are identical.
The correct scale for concert pitch C on a tenor horn is a C major.
Concert C is the clarinet's written D, so the notes for the major scale are D E F# G A B C# D
c d e f g a b c
Concert B-flat and written C are the same thing on a B-flat transposing instrument, such as a clarinet, trumpet, or tenor saxophone.
D major is D E F# G A B C# D.
C major is a major scale starting from C.
Concert Eb would be the Bb scale for horns, which has 2 flats in the key signature, so starting on low Bb, it goes Bb (1), C (open), D (1), Eb (2), F (1), G (open), A (1 2), Bb (1). The fingerings go along with a single French horn.
All 7 notes are flatted in the Cb Major scale. The Cb Major scale is enharmonic to the B Major scale and that scale has 5 sharps.(F.C,G,D,E). If you compare the 2 scales you will notice they are identical.
The French horn is built so that it sounds in the key of F. If a hornist's music says to play a middle C, it will be the same pitch as an F below middle C on the piano. If a piece of music is writen in Concert F, a C-instrument, such as a trombone, will have one flat (B flat) in his or her key signature while a hornist will have no sharps or flats.
You play it as written in concert pitch. For example, the C scale will show 2 sharps, but you play it as a C scale, no flats/no sharps. You have to transpose the notes down a step, so you will actually be playing a C and reading a D. It would be easier to learn to read bass clef!
The C major scale is: C, D, E, F, G, A, B, C.
The C major scale is: C, D, E, F, G, A, B, C.