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It`s alright, but the slide became crap really fast. I bought the Jupiter just because i thought it was cool. position of the fingers over the valves, to keep the third finger from.
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If you bought a Thein or Miraphone soprano and spent that kind of money on it, you`d know what you were doing with it before you ever shelled out that money. BUT i`m assuming you bought a Jupiter soprano for like 300 bucks. The slide positions will all be relatively the same as a tenor trombone in relation to the bell. A soprano trombone has a moving handslide and stationary bell. Most slide trumpets had a 4 note capacity to them. Slide trumpets were medieval instruments in which the bell moved back and forth, not the handslide. And waht he is talking about IS NOT A SLIDE TRUMPET. 3rd space on tenor clef reads as a B on tenor, but you move them up spaces and lines like you would treble. 3rd space on treble is a trumpet C which transposes to a trombone Bb. (and also add 2 flats to whatever the key signature is to make it bass)It`s also just like reading tenor clef. To convert treble into what you would see for bass clef, move any note on a space up 2 spaces, or if on a line move it up 2 lines and it will look like it should for bass clef. Soprano trombone can either transpose a trombone part up an octave, or you can read it treble from a trumpet. This particular example was created by Jupiter. The only thing that really uses soprano clef is a Viola. A demonstration of the soprano trombone, also known as the slide trumpet. Soprano trombones are typically pitched in B at an octave above the tenor, and they do not have much use historically. Their smaller bore allows for a more brilliant tone. Ummmm the soprano clef has nothing to do with the instrument being called soprano. Alto trombones have shorter slides that operate in different positions than a trombonist would learn on the tenor.