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.
ju89e
A bugle.
a mute...
The french horn
Yes. Cork grease is usually made from the same ingredients as vasiline or chapstick. All three can be used as slide grease on brass instruments on tuning slides. Do not use it on valves or trombone slides though.
strings,woodwind,brass and precussion instruments
Crooks are interchangeable tuning slides in different keys, used on natural (valveless) horns.
Brass instruments are instruments whose sound is made by vibration of air in a tube-like resonator in sympathy with the vibration of the player's lips. They are brassy and metallic in color. The pitch comes from two different places, the shape of the players lips, mouth, tongue, etc and the buttons or slides used to change the tubular valves. ----------------------------------------------------------------------- A brass instrument is a musical instrument whose tone is produced by vibration of the lips as the player blows into a tubular resonator . They are also called labrosones, literally meaning "lip-vibrated instruments" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The brass instrument family are instruments that produce sound by buzzing the lips together into a mouthpiece that projects the sound to the instrument, which further projects the sound. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Trumpet, Tuber and French Horn are examples of Brass Instruments.
a tuba glue
No. It is a woodwind reed instrument. The brass section includes: Trumpets, Cornets, Trombones, Tubas, Sousaphones, Baritones, F Horns (formerly known as French Horns), and any instrument that uses a brass mouthpiece and requires the player to "buzz" their lips to produce the instruments sound. "Buzzing" the lips is a phrase in which the instrument player makes a buzzing sound with their lips. Commonly used in brass instruments.
Brass instrument have valves to change the length of tubing that the air passes through. This allows the instrument to play different notes of various harmonic series.