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The_Complete_Idiot%27s_Guide_To_Music_Theory

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230<br />

Part 6: Arranging<br />

Of course, you can save yourself a lot of time and trouble by just telling the<br />

drummer how many measures there are in each section of your song and letting<br />

him (or her) make up his (or her) own part. That’s particularly common when<br />

you’re arranging for a rock or jazz band.<br />

Transposition<br />

Many instruments read one note and play another—at least compared to concert<br />

pitch (the actual notes as played on a piano). For example, a trumpet reads<br />

a C but sounds a B♭. <strong>The</strong>se so-called transposing instruments need to have their<br />

music transposed to a different key to play in the same concert key as all the<br />

other instruments.<br />

Let’s take the trumpet again. Because the trumpet always sounds a major second<br />

lower than written, you need to write the trumpet part a major second (two half<br />

steps) higher than the pitch you actually want to hear. So if you want the trumpet<br />

to play a concert C, you have to write a D; the trumpet reads D, sounds C,<br />

and everything is right with the world.<br />

You learned about transposition back in Chapter 14, and you’ll need to apply<br />

those skills here. That’s because there are a lot of instruments that don’t play in<br />

concert key; all the following instruments need their parts transposed.<br />

Most transposing instruments fall into three groups, and are named according<br />

to how they relate to C:<br />

◆ B♭ instruments, like the trumpet, sound a major second below their written<br />

pitch. That is, they’re written a major second above the concert pitch.<br />

So if one of these instruments plays a C, it comes out sounding as B♭ in<br />

concert pitch.<br />

◆ E♭ instruments, like the alto sax, sound a major sixth below (or a minor<br />

third above) their written pitch. That is, they’re written a major sixth<br />

above the concert pitch. So if one of these instruments plays a C, it comes<br />

out sounding as E♭ in concert pitch.<br />

◆ F instruments, such as the French horn, sound a perfect fifth below their<br />

written pitch. That is, they’re written a perfect fifth above the concert<br />

pitch. So if one of these instruments plays a C, it comes out sounding as F<br />

in concert pitch.<br />

<strong>The</strong> following table details which instruments fall into which group:<br />

Transposing Instruments<br />

Transposition Range Sounds Instruments<br />

B-flat instruments Major second lower Bass clarinet (actually a<br />

than written Major ninth lower)<br />

Bass saxophone<br />

Clarinet (B♭)

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