well the reed is only used for woodwinds and the mouthpiece is only used for brass. the reed is a thin piece of wood basically that when wet is more flexible and is able to vibrate which produces the sound. the mouthpiece is metal and you have to "buzz" in the mouthpiece to make a sound
The Clarinet has a reed in the mouthpiece. It is the reed that vibrates.
Technically speaking, the bassoon has no mouthpiece. It has a bocal and a reed. If the reed is say a mouthpiece then it is not the smallest. The smallest would be maybe an oboe reed or a sopranino saxophone mouthpiece, depending on your definition of mouthpiece.
No. The saxophone has a specialized mouthpiece with a small wood insert called a reed. The trumpet has no reed.
A saxophone reed is used to put on the mouthpiece and when you blow onto the mouthpiece it causes the reed to vibrate and generate sounds. This is how the sounds are made in a saxophone.
Yes, it's called the reed. Unlike the clarinet, you don't need an extra mouthpiece, this is combined.
A Reed.
They consist of a reed and mouthpiece with the exception of the Flute. Notes are created by airflow passing through the mouthpiece and reed.
mouthpiece reed ligature (Holds the reed to the mouthpiece neck (the curvy part) the body (the big part)
The main difference between woodwind and brass instruments is the material they are made of. Woodwind instruments are typically made of wood or metal and produce sound by vibrating a reed or blowing air through a mouthpiece. Brass instruments, on the other hand, are made of brass and produce sound by vibrating the player's lips against a mouthpiece.
Justin bieber
The difference between different numbered cornet mouthpieces is the size of the mouthpiece. The higher the number on the mouthpiece the smaller the mouthpiece.
No, trumpets are brass not woodwind. The only instrument that looks like brass but is woodwind is the saxaphone, a single reed instrument. Trumpets use a mouthpiece with no reed.