Hi: Mouth-guard. Of course, in slang, it's an attorney or someone who speaks up for another person.
The clarinet mouthpiece is called the mouthpiece. It doesn't have a special name.
A Reed.
If you are asking about the Yamaha signiture mouthpiece, then this is a lead mouthpiece, it is very shallow.
the mouthpiece, the bell, the valves and i dont know the rest
A mouthpiece is slang for a lawyer.
The best way to remove a mouthpiece is with a mouthpiece puller. Most music stores will have a puller, and some will even pull mouthpieces for free. You will get a lot of other suggestions on how to pull the mouthpiece. The problem is, if you use pliers or other inappropriate tools, even with padding of some kind, you can damage the trumpet. The only relatively safe way to try it yourself is to hold the trumpet's mouthpiece tube (ahead of the mouthpiece) under the hot water tap for a couple of minutes. While doing this, hold a package of frozen vegetables, or the like, around the mouthpiece. The idea is to get the mouthpiece as cold as possible, and the pipe as warm as possible. Then, using a hot pad, try to extract the mouthpiece. This may or may not work (it does most of the time) but if it doesn't, it causes no harm to the trumpet.
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.
The duration of The Mouthpiece is 1.43 hours.
When I was a kid in the 1950's and 60's, Dorn and Kirschner was a large music store in Newark, NJ. They sold stuff under their own name and the DeKay name. I would guess that a mouthpiece bearing their name was made for them, not by them.
Mouthpiece - comics - was created in 1941.
The Mouthpiece of Zitu was created in 1965.
the discharge through orifice can be increased by fitting a mouthpiece.