Bass, but sometimes tenor when playing higher music.
You'll sometimes come across treble clef in French and Belgian publications. It is used to avoid extra leger lines above the tenor clef.
It depends on the setting. British brass bands use transposed treble clef in to read music to make switching between instruments easier. Bb tubas would be reading the same valve combinations as a Bb Trumpet would. In most other settings, they read bass clef in concert pitch.
It plays on bass clef. Tuba is a bass brass instrument like the sousaphone or baritone.
No way. Trumpet is considered high-brass, meaning it is read in treble clef. It also is the highest brass instrument...
bass clef
Generally it plays Bass clef. It plays all clefs though.
Trombone treble clef though is different from regular treble clef.
The trumpet plays in the Treble Clef.
Trumpet is a treble cleff instrument.
Mostly bass clef, sometimes tenor clef.
Treble clef
The piano uses both the Treble clef (for higher pitches) and the Bass clef (for lower pitches). It plays in the key of C. Sometimes it is misinterpreted that the Treble clef is for the rigth hand and the Bass clef if for the left hand. This isn't true. Both hands can use the Treble clef or Bass clef, or even the right hand can use the Bass clef and the left hand can use the Treble clef.
Treble clef, and bass clef, are just clefs, all notes can be played by writing with both of these clefs. If you mean, can the bass clef play below middle C, then yes, but just below at its Bb. The question itself is vague.
The flute plays in the Treble Clef and is a C instrument.
Treble clef unless you're playing a bass banjo which should be played in bass clef.
Xylophones usually play in the treble celf* - They have made xylophones for bass clef though.
Clarinets play in treble clef.
Bass and treble clef.
The piano uses both the Treble clef (for higher pitches) and the Bass clef (for lower pitches). It plays in the key of C. Sometimes it is misinterpreted that the Treble clef is for the rigth hand and the Bass clef if for the left hand. This isn't true. Both hands can use the Treble clef or Bass clef, or even the right hand can use the Bass clef and the left hand can use the Treble clef.
Treble clef, and bass clef, are just clefs, all notes can be played by writing with both of these clefs. If you mean, can the bass clef play below middle C, then yes, but just below at its Bb. The question itself is vague.
The flute plays in the Treble Clef and is a C instrument.
Saxophones usually play in the Treble Clef.
Yes. Accordion music is like piano music because it uses both the treble and the bass clef. Usually, you play the notes in the treble clef with the right hand and the notes in the bass clef with the left hand.
Treble clef unless you're playing a bass banjo which should be played in bass clef.
The piano uses both the Treble clef (for higher pitches) and the Bass clef (for lower pitches). It plays in the key of C. Sometimes it is misinterpreted that the Treble clef is for the rigth hand and the Bass clef if for the left hand. This isn't true. Both hands can use the Treble clef or Bass clef, or even the right hand can use the Bass clef and the left hand can use the Treble clef.
I believe you mean to say "Does a double bass read from bass or treble clef?" The answer to that is bassists almost always read bass clef. But very good bassists that play very high read treble clef often and sometimes tenor clef.
Xylophones usually play in the treble celf* - They have made xylophones for bass clef though.
actually basses can play on three clefs bass clef, tenor clef, and treble clef, its rare for basses to use to treble but it is used when the notes get higher and higher. so they can play both but mostly bass clef