What is the trill for G on flute?
Third Octave: D6 to B 6
<< Back to Second Octave | ||
---|---|---|
Trill | Fingering | Description |
G6-A 6 | 123|-D–Eb | Basic. |
123|C#—Eb | Basic with C# trill key. | |
123G#|—Eb | Flat Ab. |
How many notes can a flute play?
If you have a regular (standard student classical flute) C flute with a C foot joint and you travel chromatically upward through the 3 full octaves you’ll have 36 notes. If you have a B foot joint and use a few new fingerings to go above the 4th octave C, you’ll have around 38 + notes.
Do I trill up or down?
Forgive me for stating the obvious, but a trill is a rapid alternation between adjacent pitches, up either a half step or whole step from the notated pitch (never down).
What is a flat trill?
The basic explanation however is this: Trills can be notated with ‘tr’, as the symbol of a wavy line, or in very old music, as a plus sign. If there is a flat or sharp in the key signature that pertains to the upper note of the trill, then the upper note has that flat or sharp applied to it.
How do you trill between C and D on flute?
For the lower C to D, you use the first trill key with your index finger. For the C to D up the octave, it’s the other trill key – with your ring finger. Okay, so for the C# to D trills, both the low and the high, are the first trill key.
What is the C trill key on flute?
The C# trill key is a lever activated by the first finger of the right hand to open a tone hole next to the thumb key. It simplifies many awkward trill and tremolo fingerings, and has become a preferred feature among professional flutists. It is available as an option on the Azumi AZ3 flute.
What is a tremolo flute?
tremolo. or. “shake” a trill between two notes more than a tone apart.
What is the highest note on a flute?
The “official” highest note of a standard flute is the C 3 octaves above middle C (called “4th octave C” if counting from where the flute starts, “7th octave C” on the piano), but I sometimes get asked how to finger notes above it (e.g. when CUCOS played arrangements that seemed determined to push the flutes too high).