Tuba, it is the longest so it creates the lowest tones. In order it would be tuba, baritone and trombone. Baritone and trombone are basically the same but baritone sounds a bit better at the lowest part of its range.
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.
Usually the Trombone, Baritone, Euphonium, Tuba, Bass Clarinet, Baritone Sax all play in bass clef.
8va means that you have to play the tune an octave higher or lower. Together with 8va you should find a hairpin that starts from where you should play an octave higher or lower till when you should stop. If you find it on top of the music you should play it an octave higher, if you find it below the music, you should play it an octave lower
The position for high E flat on the trombone is third position. :)
Tuba, it is the longest so it creates the lowest tones. In order it would be tuba, baritone and trombone. Baritone and trombone are basically the same but baritone sounds a bit better at the lowest part of its range.
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.
Usually the Trombone, Baritone, Euphonium, Tuba, Bass Clarinet, Baritone Sax all play in bass clef.
8va means that you have to play the tune an octave higher or lower. Together with 8va you should find a hairpin that starts from where you should play an octave higher or lower till when you should stop. If you find it on top of the music you should play it an octave higher, if you find it below the music, you should play it an octave lower
The position for high E flat on the trombone is third position. :)
It can be either, depending on how well you can play it. In general, a Trombone is a bass instrument, playing in the bass clef, making it a relatively low-pitched instrument.
A Trombone. The slide allows the trombone to play lower pitches.
The trombone mouthpiece is exactly the same as an euphonium one. You may also (with difficulty) manage to play a Bass Trombone or Tuba with a tenor trombone mute
The drums, piano, trumpet, trombone and the bass guitar
I would not consider the regular "tenor trombone" to be a scholarship instrument. However, instruments such as the alto and bass trombone are more likely choices as "scholarship instruments.". If you play tenor now, bass wouldn't be too difficult to learn. Euphonium is an alternative that is more like a tenor trombone. Source(s) 7 years of playing tenor trombone, 2 years of doubling on Euphonium, Bass Trombone, & Tuba.
the instrument i play that is in bass clef is bassoon and contrabassoon. there are others like the tuba, baritone, Trombone, and tubax.
Double Basses normally play in the Bass Clef. On the other hand, they sometimes use Tenor Clef and I have seen Treble clef used for higher notes but transposed an octave lower than written.