On a tenor trombone, the slid positions that each of the following notes is played on key C are:
- A (A Natural) - Second Position
- Bb (B Flat) - 1st Position
- C (C Natural) 6th Position
- D (D Natural) - 4th Position
- Eb (E Flat) 3rd Position
- F# (F Sharp) - 5th Position
- G# (G Sharp) - 3rd position./
<h3>What is a tenor trombone?</h3>
The fundamental note of the tenor trombone is B, and it is normally classified as a non-transposing instrument.
In the mid-nineteenth century, tenor trombones with C as its basic note were almost equally popular in Britain and France.
Learn more about tenor trombone at:
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Answer:
monochromatic
Explanation:
I took art classes for 3 years and I always knew that a monochromatic "drawing" or "picture" was something that contained one "base color".
ex. blue, it could be royal blue, light blue, navy blue, as long as they were in the same base, it's monochromatic.
mono = "only"
chromatic = (technically) "color"
monochromatic = "only (one) color"
also, don't confuse "shade" with "color". ex. color is blue, but the shade is light blue. you can have many different shades in a monochromatic "picture", but you can only have one color. :)