panaarabia.blogg.se

B flat note
B flat note










Moving both hand together can give some players problems in the early stages but, as we have mentioned before, when tonguing, detach the notes enough to give you time to place both fingers onto the instrument before you tongue. Once you are happy with that progression try playing from B natural and drop the third finger of the left hand and the first finger of the right hand to produce the B flat. Now lift the second finger of the right hand and the second finger of the left hand to give you the fingering for B flat. Play the note E on the descant (soprano). Using the standard nomenclature, the fingering for first octave B flat, or for the enharmonic equivalent A sharp, is written 0 1 3 4. Below that we give the standard fingering for this note, theįingering you would use under normal circumstances. Click on the play button in the Sibelius score The enharmonic equivalent to B flat is A sharp in the equitempered scale - that is both notes have the same fingering. The ninth note we learn, B flat on the descant (soprano) recorder, lies on the middle line of the treble clef but has a flat sign before it, in the key signature at the beginning of the stave or on a B earlier in the same bar.

b flat note

Home :: resources :: music theory & history :: recorder lessons :: music dictionary :: physics of musical instruments :: e-monographsĬontents :: help page :: first things first :: fingering charts :: glossary of recorder terms :: Quick C :: Quick F :: comments or queries?ī :: A :: G :: E :: D :: C :: F :: F#/G b :: B b/A# :: C#/D b :: G#/A b :: D#/E b :: Second Octave :: Third Octave Dolmetsch Online - Recorder Method Online Descant B flat / A sharp












B flat note