Recorder Method   Online : Treble/Alto

by Dr. Brian Blood

Arpeggios
e-monographs | fingering charts | do you have comments or queries? | dolmetsch summer school | music theory online | recorder method

Instrumental music is filled with passage work based on scales and arpeggios. For this reason, good teachers encourage their students to develop their technical facility by learning to play scales and arpeggios in every key, slurred, played legato and played detached. We have listed all the common scales and arpeggios below and we make suggestions for phrasing them so that they become 'second nature'.

You may download a full set of the arpeggios from our pdf file download page.

On the recorder the easiest arpeggio is that of the key note on your recorder - on the treble/alto recorder this arpeggio is in F major. As a general guide, arpeggios become more difficult the greater the number of sharps or flats in their key signatures.

NOTES: - Scales and arpeggios feature in most practical instrumental examinations. You should be aware that each examining board sets its own requirements for the range and order of notes and you must refer to the board's own publications to find out exactly what these are.

  • Major Arpeggios in C, G, D, A, F, B flat, E flat
  • Major Arpeggios in E, B, F sharp, C sharp, A flat, D flat, G flat C flat
  • Minor Arpeggios in A, E, B, F sharp, D, G, C
  • Minor Arpeggios in C sharp, G sharp, D sharp, A sharp, F, B flat, E flat, A flat
  • Dominant Seventh Chords
  • Diminished Seventh Chords