transpose tenor to alto sax 2006-01-06 11:29 pm how many half notes, and in which direction to transpose tenor to alto sax?thanks for any help Quote Selected
Re: transpose tenor to alto sax Reply #1 – 2006-01-06 11:48 pm I am also looking for any info I can find on the mechanics of playing glissando on the piano in the style of Jerry Lee Lewis and others in the rock and roll songs.Any information will be appreciated. Quote Selected
Re: transpose tenor to alto sax Reply #2 – 2006-01-07 10:30 pm The tenor sax is B Flat, and the alto sax is E Flat, so five steps up.Can't help with your second question. Quote Selected
Re: transpose tenor to alto sax Reply #3 – 2006-01-08 12:31 am Tenor to Alto at the same pitch is 5 semitones DOWN. Quote Selected
Re: transpose tenor to alto sax Reply #4 – 2006-01-08 03:14 am Yes, Barry is correct, and it is half steps, not half notes. Quote Selected
Re: transpose tenor to alto sax Reply #5 – 2006-01-11 01:42 am ;_;Five steps down would be an F, right? Quote Selected
Re: transpose tenor to alto sax Reply #6 – 2006-01-11 09:35 am "Five steps down would be an F, right?"Five steps down from What?Look at it this way.When the piano plays middle C the Tenor plays the D 14 semitones above.When the piano plays middle C the Alto plays the A 9 semitones above.All instruments are sounding middle C but the written Tenor note is D and the written Alto note is A (written 5 semitones below the tenor). Quote Selected
Re: transpose tenor to alto sax Reply #7 – 2006-01-12 01:45 am I always thought the key was relative to the piano's C...o_0 Quote Selected
Re: transpose tenor to alto sax Reply #8 – 2006-01-12 05:48 am "relative to C"Yes it is but it works the other way.When the Alto plays C the Piano plays the Eb below.When the Tenor plays C the Piano plays the Bb over an octave below.The transpositions from written piano to:-written Alto - up 9 semitones.written Tenor - up 14 semitones.From written Alto to written Tenor - up 5 semitones.From written Tenor to written Alto - down 5 semitones.The Alto is pitched higher so its written lower.The Tenor is pitched lower so its written higher.It's confusing unless you play both. Quote Selected