bass clef ya dumb
Bass and treble clef.
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.
no, i play the Bass Clarinet and all my music sheets have just a tribal clef
Clarinets play in treble clef.
drums, trumpet, and tuba Also cello, double bass, bass guitar, Bassoon, contrabassoon, trombone, euphonium and etc
Treble clef unless you're playing a bass banjo which should be played in bass clef.
No the violin's have there own clef and viola's also have there own clef but cello and bass have the same clef.
You can play any instrument with the bass clef. This is just a convention to write notes of certain height in the bass clef. You can play a piece on an instrument if their diapasons match. Or even it is not so, you can transpose a piece to the diapason for your instrument. Usually, pieces written for bass instruments (for example, electric bass guitar or double bass) are noted on the bass clef.
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.
That depends on the instrument. For example, trumpet music is typically written in treble clef, while trombone and tuba music is in bass clef. And, of course, variations on instruments (bass trumpet) can differ from the convention.
I'm not sure what your question was... so I'll assume you're asking about the way to properly transpose Bass music (again, string bass, or what?). Bass is a C, non-transposing instrument, and trumpet is a Bb transposing instrument in a higher clef, so you'll need to start on the note written for bass, write it one or two octaves higher to the same note in the treble clef, and then move it up two half steps for the trumpet to play the same sounding note as the bass. (obviously a few octaves higher) Did this help?