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Free Euphonium & Baritone Fingering Chart (3-Valve)
The euphonium and baritone horn are among the most accessible brass instruments for new players — their mellow tone and mid-range pitch sit comfortably in the band texture. This chart covers the 3-valve system used on most student and intermediate models, and also applies to 3-valve trombone. What's in the Chart This chart covers the full standard range of the 3-valve euphonium, baritone horn, and valve trombone. Each note is shown with its valve combination, from open through all single, double, and triple valve combinations. Treble clef and bass clef players will both find this chart useful, as both clef conventions are common for these instruments. Who This Is For Beginning euphonium and baritone students Students coming from trumpet who are doubling on euphonium Valve trombone players Band directors looking for a classroom reference Treble vs. Bass Clef In the United States, baritone players often read treble clef (where the part sounds a major ninth lower than written), while euphonium players typically read bass clef (concert pitch). If you're not sure which clef your part uses, check with your director — and note that the fingerings on this chart remain the same regardless of which clef you're reading.↓ Download the Euphonium & Baritone Fingering Chart (PDF)
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