The Fingering Forum
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Author: Nick
Date: 2003-03-08 20:04
If A soprano sax is 4 pitches higher than an alto sax, does that mean that, a soprano sax have the same exact fingerings and read the same noted just and octave apart?
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Author: Gnomon
Date: 2003-03-08 20:20
That's right. The soprano sax music looks the same but sounds an octave higher. But a soprano sax is harder to play.
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Author: Nick
Date: 2003-03-08 20:24
when i say read the same notes i mean like, a C on alto sax isnt a C on soprano sax, but is the fingering for a C on Tenor the same as a C on soprano?
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Author: Nick
Date: 2003-03-08 20:25
thanks, i was getting really confused with the alto charts
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Author: sax playa
Date: 2003-03-09 01:03
Yes the fingering are all the same for every single saophone u find out there <b>except</b> for the really old ones were the low b and c# key are switched. Even though the fingerings are the same for the same note written on a music the soprano and tenor will be playing the same pitch an octave apart <b>but</b> the alto, bari, and sopranino which are in Eb will give you a totally different pitch.
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Author: Nick
Date: 2003-03-09 11:23
i'm sorry my typing was like screwed up on this one, i just looked at it again, it supposed to say:
If a soprano sax is 4 pithces hiher than an alto sax, does that mean that a soprano and a tenor read the same notes and are the fingerings for a specific note the same, like a C fingering on alto sounds different (in pitch) than the C fingering on soprano and tenor.
sorry again,
Nick
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Author: ponderingwonderer
Date: 2004-12-23 10:27
How is the soprano harder to play?
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