That would be a bugle. Bugles actually only play about four notes; all bugle calls are based on them.
Pick one fingering and only play those notes. Traditionally, bugles are tuned in G, so the equivalent would be 1st and 2nd valve on a B-flat trumpet.
IT will be harder because when you play trombone your lips arent as firm on the trumpet, and you need to tighten even more for a higher note than the trombone! So, harder.
The trumpet is much smaller than the tuba, hence it has a higher pitch.
A trumpet that plays naturally in the key of Eb. (It can be played in other keys, but the scores are basically musical workarounds.) An Eb trumpet is used mostly by pros. It's harder to play in tune, about 1/3rd smaller than the standard student model Bb trumpet. Eb trumpets are mostly used to play solos.
The range of a trumpet is determined by the skill of the player. Some players can play up to a C above the staff, but many, many can play much higher than that.
There are two parts to the answer. First, the way you play higher is to speed up the air that you are blowing through it. Having said that, second, as a general rule, the shallower the mouthpiece, the easier it is to play higher.
A trumpist. I know because I play the trumpet...:)
Bugles don't have valves, and as such can only play in one key. This makes them unlikely to play in an orchestra. ITs only when a piece requires a specific tone (the bugle has a different tone to that of the cornet, trumpet and flugle horn)
If the bugle is in the normal key of B-flat, then the notes played by the bugle correspond to the open notes of the trumpet - no valves pressed down at all. If the bugle is in a different key than the trumpet, you will need to transpose the bugle notes into the key of the trumpet to find which notes to play on the trumpet. After you have done the transposition, it should be the case that the same valve combination can be used for all the bugle notes in that key.
You can't It depends on what you mean. The B-flat trumpet plays one full tone below concert pitch, so to make the tone match, you must play one step higher. In other words, a C on the piano is a D on the trumpet. Chords work the same way. A C chord on the piano is a D chord on the trumpet. However, the trumpet can play only one note at a time, so a single trumpet cannot play a chord, but can play single notes of the chord.
you get the trumpet then you roll it.