Thanks very muchUsually the sax part will only show you the sax notes, the piano accompaniment part has sax and piano, sax on a single stave and the 2 piano staves below that. This allows the accompanist to see what you should be playing. And should allow you to see where you play and don't play.
Not sure what you mean by the part numbers.
Hi as a beginner I am a little stuck at the moment just looking at some music it’s says duet with piano keys at the top. Then it has parts 1,2,6 and eleven. Do I only play sax on 1, 6 and 11. If anyone can help it would be fab thanks.
Posted pic now@Kas44 - I don't understand what you mean by "parts 1, 2, 6 and eleven".
I think it might help if you could post a picture of the music.
Part 1 and Part 2 I think refer to the different lines but the 6 and 11 are the bar numbers.
You will speed your learning if you get a way from writing the note names on the parts. It is slow at first but faster in the long run
Jx
Ok thanksIt's for two identical instruments, not sax and piano. Both parts are in the same key, D major. The upper part, part 1, is for one player. Part 2 for the other player. As Jeanette says, the small numbers are bar numbers, usually only the first bar on each line is numbered, then you count on from there. The first, incomplete 'pick up bar' doesn't count in this numbering. Bar numbers help when rehearsing, e.g. play from bar 13.
Thank youPart 1 and Part 2 I think refer to the different lines but the 6 and 11 are the bar numbers.
You will speed your learning if you get away from writing the note names on the parts. It is slow at first but faster in the long run
Jx
Also, thoPart 1 and Part 2 I think refer to the different lines but the 6 and 11 are the bar numbers.
You will speed your learning if you get away from writing the note names on the parts. It is slow at first but faster in the long run
Jx
ThanksAlso, those F's are F#'s because of the key signature.![]()