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The tuba, and other low brass e.g. trombones, mellophones...
yes
Usually the Trombone, Baritone, Euphonium, Tuba, Bass Clarinet, Baritone Sax all play in bass clef.
the instrument i play that is in bass clef is bassoon and contrabassoon. there are others like the tuba, baritone, Trombone, and tubax.
Tuba, sousaphone, and things with "bass" or "contra" in the name: bass, Bass Clarinet, contrabass Clarinet, contrabassoon, etc. "Bass" means it plays the bass line, and "contra" means it's so big it has to double back on itself.
No, the contra-bass tuba is much larger than the C tuba.
A tuba. They are sometimes referred to as a bass i.e E flat of B flat bass
tuba double bass bass clarinet
Tuba
Bass clef generally. The Tuba is considered to be a non-transposing instrument, so a BBb, CC, EEb or F tuba will read from the same music and it is up to the player to know the correct fingerings. Sometimes (especially in Jazz charts) the parts are written an octave above the actual sounded note, the same as music for a Contrabass Violin (String Bass) or Bass Guitar. For what is called "British Brass Band Music" the Tuba part is usually transposed into the Treble Clef, so the part for a BBb tuba will look different than a part for an EEb tuba.
oom pah
Wagner tuba, but those parts are often covered by euphoniums