Question that I received about transposition for alto sax.
Hi Neal
Please can you help me out, I am having a very heated debate with a soon to be ex friend lol… We are debating about transposing an alto sax into a standard “c” tuned guitar that is playing in the key of “F” …
I say the notes i need to play are: C# E F# G AB C C #
He says that I need to play : D E F# G A B C# D
Please can you let me know who of us is the idiot
Many thanks and kind regards
Matthew
If the guitar is playing in F, that means D on the alto sax.
Just like an Eb on the guitar would be a C on the alto sax. Eb to C is down a minor third. F to D is down a minor third.
It sounds like your friend is right.
You wrote, C# E F# G AB C C # though. I see two sharps and both C and C#…. I don’t understand what you mean by that. How did you get to those notes?
-Neal
Basically I was saying that after having given it some thought I was probably wrong and felt like an idiot, now that you have confirmed it, I really feel like and idiot lol
Basically the way I had worked it out was I wrote down the c scale, bad worked out what I would have to play on the sax to get that, and with that sax “c” scale, I started at F and made everything there on 3 half steps down, where as I should have taken the f scale and done that, but yes I feel silly now haha
Thank you for your help
Regards
Matthew
You just got mixed up about how transposition works, but since you had this debate with your friend, I think you will probably remember it well from now on!
-Neal