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yes. think of it as trumpet plays treble cleff. (high pitch instruments and sounds) trombone plays bass cleff (lower notes and sounds) The difference between the cleffs is 3 half steps (I believe) Typically bass cleff notes are lower but not always. It depends if the two are the same part. If you are asking about the treble clef baritone vs. bass clef baritone issue in bands, there's a catch: treble clef baritone players read notes written in the treble clef but the sound they make is actually a major 9th (octave + 1 whole step) lower. (E.g. if a treble-clef baritone player sees a middle C on the treble clef, the note that is actually played is a B-flat on the 2nd line from the bottom of the bass clef.) So actually, a bass-clef baritone part and a treble-clef baritone part from the same piece of music are probably identical in sound. They're just written differently. The reason: trumpet players, who usually play in a B-flat transposition (sounds a step lower, their written C comes out B-flat), can switch over to baritone more easily if they continue to read the same clef and finger the notes the same way. (Same thing is true of the saxophones, who all read basically the same range of the treble clef, finger more or less the same, but come out with sounds in very different registers.) It's pretty common, at least in U.S. schools, for baritone players to have started out as trumpet players, and this practice facilitates the switch. Most of the low brass world, though, uses untransposed bass clef--what you see is what you hear. Baritone players are well advised to learn bass clef as soon as possible. Still, they need to understand how the transposed treble-clef parts work--it's part of the environment.
I have the baritone
tenor, baritone, lead, and bass
Tenor, Baritone, Bass
As he was a baritone he would take the parts written for that voice, for example, 'Rigoletto' the Duke's jester in the opera of the same name.
GuitarBassPianoKeyboardTromboneTubaBaritone/EuphoniumBassoonBass ClarinetBari SaxophoneThis clef is used for the cello, double bass, bass guitar, bassoon, contrabassoon, trombone, euphonium and tuba; for the lower part of keyboard instruments like the piano, organ, and harpsichord (of which the upper part is usually written in treble clef); and for the lowest notes of the horn(English, French, etc.); and the baritone and bass voices.
Alto and Soprano are voice parts, along with tenor, baritone and bass. Each part sing in a different pitch range; Soprano is the highest, then alto, tenor, baritone and bass. Tenor, baritone, and bass are traditionally sung by men, while the other two are sung by women.
They're given the same names as male counterparts: tenor, lead, baritone, and bass.
Low voice types for males are in the Bass family. The ones that I know of are Basso broffundo, bass 2, bass 1, baritone-bass, and baritone. Timbre and vocal range are the key parts that distinguish exactly which you belong to.
Yes.Yes.Yes.Yes.
Low voice types for males are in the Bass family. The ones that I know of are Basso broffundo, bass 2, bass 1, baritone-bass, and baritone. Timbre and vocal range are the key parts that distinguish exactly which you belong to.
Low voice types for males are in the Bass family. The ones that I know of are Basso broffundo, bass 2, bass 1, baritone-bass, and baritone. Timbre and vocal range are the key parts that distinguish exactly which you belong to.