English, asked by asifkh023627, 9 months ago

b. Describe what the distenor was doing​

Answers

Answered by sd9884927534
0

Explanation:

Naturals

Notes that are neither sharp nor flat are called "natural." This table shows the names of notes in Germany, enpan, Italy, France, the UK, and the US.

Naturals

Germany C D E F G A H C

Japan Ha Ni Ho He To I Ro Ha

Italy Do Re Mi Fa Sol La Si Do

France Do(Ut) Re Mi Fa Sol La Si Do(Ut)

UK

US C D E F G A B C

2. Accidentals

Notes with signs indicating flats (♭), sharps (♯), or other changes, are called accidentals.

1) A sharp (♯) refers to a tone one half-step above a natural.

Accidentals♯

Germany Cis Dis Eis Fis Gis Ais His Cis

Japan Ei ha Ei ni Ei ho Ei he Ei to Ei i Ei ro Ei ha

Italy Do

dieisis Re

dieisis Mi

dieisis Fa

dieisis Sol

dieisis La

dieisis Si

dieisis Do

dieisis

France Do(Ut)

diesis Re

diesis Mi

diesis Fa

diesis Sol

diesis La

diesis Si

diesis Do

diesis

UK

US C sharp D sharp E sharp F sharp G sharp A sharp B sharp C sharp

2) A flat (♭) refers to a tone one half-step above a natural.

Accidentals♭

Germany Ces Des Es Fes Ges As B Ces

Japan Hen ha Hen ni Hen ho Hen he Hen to Hen i Hen ro Hen ha

Italy Do

bemolle Re

bemolle Mi

bemolle Fa

bemolle Sol

bemolle La

bemolle Si

bemolle Do

bemolle

France Do(Ut)

bemole Re

bemole Mi

bemole Fa

bemole Sol

bemole La

bemole Si

bemole Do

bemole

UK

US C flat D flat E flat F flat G flat A flat B flat C flat

This covers the basic notes, but there are also double sharps (two half-steps up, indicated by ♯♯), and double flats (two half-steps down, indicated by ♭♭).

Playing an actual ("concert") F scale

An F scale is a scale that begins at F. On a piano, an F major scale has one flat: F, G, A, B♭, C, D, E. When this same scale is played on a tenor saxophone, however, what is actually played is this: G, A, B, C, D, E, F♯

Playing a tenor saxophone F scale

This can be played with the normal saxophone fingerings: F, G, A, B♭, C, D, E

Transference between instruments

Saxophones essentially all have the same fingering, so those fingerings carry over between them.

When changing from an alto sax to a soprano sax, for instance, the alto has an E♭ tube, while the soprano has a B♭ tube, meaning that even when you play the same score, different sounds are produced. Unless the score itself has been changed beforehand, the player must transpose the notes as they play. The mouthpieces are also different between instruments, so it may take some time getting used to each one.

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