Music!!! discussion
Instruments
>
Clarinet
date
newest »
newest »
message 1:
by
Jo
(new)
Oct 19, 2015 02:09PM
This is the other instrument I play (but I just started in September).
reply
|
flag
I really want to play the Clarinet, but I haven't gotten around to it yet.
Actually, it's the opposite. Playing comes quite easy to me now, and I only mess up when I have a bad reed.
It's weird, I don't any names of the notes I just look at the note and know where to place my fingers!
Just keep practicing and don't get frustrated. Try to stay calm and make sure you have a good reed. You will do fine :)
Hawthorn (Joan) wrote: "weird... I just started, and I cant ever play any really high notes. any advice?"
Practice, and tightening your lips can also help. Once you've been playing for a while, you can get a different reed, and that can help, too. Getting a reed with a higher # is a little hard to get used to, but the high notes sound WAY better. (Try playing a really high C on a size 1 and a half. You won't want to.)
Hawthorn (Joan) wrote: "Okay thanks! I can get a lot further now. How long have you been playing?"Four years ish.
Does anyone play Eb clarinet? I want to but I have to wait 2 years ish. I know it will be harder than Bb but can anyone tell me a little about it?
I've never played an E flat clarinet. It shouldn't be a lot harder, though, because the fingering is the same.
The music is transposed differently. Have you noticed a C on a clarinet is not a concert C? This is because clarinet music is transposed to B flat. E flat clarinet has the same fingerings, but the physical pitch is different. Ex. an E flat clarinet's C will be played the same as a B flat clarinet's C, but the physical concert pitch will be different.


![Jaxon(Jax)[They-He]](https://images.gr-assets.com/users/1749715398p1/46156450.jpg)
