Home - How-To Section - Low Register - Upper Register - Altissimo Register Fingering Chart
There are two standard fingerings for high G. Scroll down for explanations of each fingering. To see the fingerings for other pitches, select one of the note images in the chart below.
Purchase the printable versions of these fingering charts.
View the interactive lower register clarinet fingering chart.
View the interactive upper register clarinet fingering chart.
Notes on the fingerings for high G
Fingering #1 is used most often for high G, although it can be a bit sharp on some clarinets. Fingering #2 is sometimes better in tune depending on the instrument, but it is harder to reach in most passages when playing in the altissimo register.
How to use the fingering charts
Your left hand is represented by pink circles with a number indicating which finger to place on a key or cover a tone hole. Your right hand is represented with blue circles in these fingering charts.
Select a note below to see the fingering for each pitch, hear what it sounds like, and view alternate fingerings.
More Educational Tools from Kyle Coughlin
Learn all about rhythm and improve your sight reading. Rhythm-In-Music.com is an interactive website that teaches all of the fundamental aspects of rhythm, covering beat, tempo, meter, time-signature, and all note values. It is an online version of Kyle Coughlin’s book The Fundamentals of Rhythm, featuring over 450 different rhythm patterns for practice, with audio recordings of each pattern.
View the interactive lower register clarinet fingering chart
View the interactive upper register clarinet fingering chart
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