One would be the Sousaphone.
The fraction is 4/15.
Brass and percussion are two very distinct and different categories of instruments. You'd be missing a huge element of a band with one and not the other.
At least two french horns, four trombones, four trumpets, and two tubas.
The modern family of brass instruments can be broken into valved brass instruments (trumpet, horn, euphonium, tuba) and slide brass instruments (trombone). Brass instruments could also be broken up into Cylindrical bore (constant diameter tubing like the trumpet and trombone) and Conical bore (increasing diameter tubing like the horn, euphonium, and tuba).
Usually tuba, trombone, french horn and two trumpets (another trumpet player might play piccolo trumpet)
There are four types of musical instruments: String, Wind, Brass and Percussion.
Trombone and euphonium/baritone.
yup.
The noun 'brass' is:a common noun, a general word for a metal compound; a general word for musical instruments made of this metal; a general word for the section of a band or orchestra comprised of these instruments;a concrete noun, a word for something physical that can be seen and touched;an uncountable noun (mass noun), a word for a substance;a word for a thing.Note: The plural noun 'brasses' is a word for two or more musical instruments made of this substance.The word 'brass' is also an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.
A "classical band of four" is called a quintet, and traditionally uses two violins, a viola and a cello. For two, you can use any two string instruments.
Brass instruments can have valves or a slide, but not reeds. Brass instruments create sound by the vibrating of the player's embouchure in a mouthpiece, and the valves and slides on the instrument change the length of the tubing in the instrument which affects the pitch of the notes produced. Reeds are used in woodwind instruments to vibrate to produce a sound instead of using a mouthpiece like in brass instruments.