Woodwinds
Welcome to the bass and baritone sax review section.
about four feet
The alto sax is generally not known as "an E flat sax", as a baritone saxophone is also in E flat.
French horn, trumpet, tuba, bar-sax (also part woodwind), baritone, euphonium (like baritone, but with straight top).
e
7 octaves
Contrabass sax, Bass sax, Baritone sax ,Tenor Sax, Contrabassoon, Bassoon, Contrabass clarinet, bass clarinet, and bass oboe.
When Adolphe Sax was experimenting with Bass Clarinets, he accidentally invented the Baritone Saxophone in 1840.
any where from 1 to maybe 3
It's pretty easy... but everyone is different. It depends on if you know what you are doing and if its a baritone sax or just a regular baritone. This question is more of an opinion.
Flute, piccilo, clarinet, oboe (depending on who you ask), trombone, trumpet, alto sax, tenor sax, bari sax, melophone (french horn), marching baritone (baritone), suzaphone (tuba), quads, bass drum, snare drum