No, baritones are a low brass instrument and only require a mouthpiece.
Usually there are no baritones in an orchestra.
No. Clarinets are in Trebel clef, Baritones are in Bass Clef
baritones
Baritones.
Because you need a reed to play it and the reed is made of wood.
Because you need a reed in the mouthpiece to make a sound
Yes
trupets,trombones,tubas,baritones,saxophones and, flutes
How you put a saxophone reed on is you loosen the gold reed holder on the mouthpiece. Do not take of the golden reed holder! Stick the reed in your mouth and wet it with your Silva. Once wet slip it under the gold reed holder. Make sure you get it on straight and you cover up the hole in the mouthpiece. Tighten the gold reed holder and make sure your reed is on straight. Now all you need to do is play your saxophone.
You need a vacuum gauge and it is reed in inches.
Yes, it's called the reed. Unlike the clarinet, you don't need an extra mouthpiece, this is combined.
Baritone, is of course, the lower register in music. Think of a music-based sentence. Baritone also refers to male singers in a choir, that are in the lower register. Majority of male singers are baritones, and a baritone is a way of saying "a male singer". "The baritones of the choir gave the song a rich sound" "The baritone players were not as loud as the others" "The choir had more baritones than sopranos" Think of this kind of thing, it may help! Choirs and bands and such!