A bass could, and you could also have another cello play the lower part. There are other cases where a violin/viola could also.
Sounds like a bass to me, not a cello? I could be wrong...
The viola comes from the "violin family" although the viola came first. Some people state this as the "viola family." To be more general, you could categorize this as the string family if you include guitars pianos etc.
the cello is used for making music with a deeper pitch but not as deep as bass
They're completely different.The violin is a melody instrument that often plays a solo part.The thorough bass is more usually called the "basso continuo," or "continuo" for short. It consists of an instrument, and usually two instruments, that play the bass line and the harmony. The expression is used in baroque music.The continuo is typically a cello or viola da gamba, which plays the bass line, and a harpsichord, which plays the bass line and harmony. The continuo may also be played on a small organ, theorbo, lute, harp, double bass or violone.Thus a Handel sonata for violin will be played by a violin on the solo part, with cello and harpsichord as the continuo group.
Several instruments make use of both bass and tenor clefs. The most common ones I can think of presently are the cello and the bassoon. Much of the time, music is written in bass clef, but can change when the passage to be played moves up to a higher register where tenor clef would be appropriate.
Cello is part of the string family. It is played with a bow.
Sounds like a bass to me, not a cello? I could be wrong...
it depends on if you want to feature the flute then the flute will be the lead or the melody the violin would be the harmony but the cello will always be bass if it was featuring the violin then the violin would be melody the flute will be harmony and the cello still will be bass
The viola comes from the "violin family" although the viola came first. Some people state this as the "viola family." To be more general, you could categorize this as the string family if you include guitars pianos etc.
Bass is the bottom-most voice or instrument part. For example, string bass, or the bass voice.
the cello is used for making music with a deeper pitch but not as deep as bass
They're completely different.The violin is a melody instrument that often plays a solo part.The thorough bass is more usually called the "basso continuo," or "continuo" for short. It consists of an instrument, and usually two instruments, that play the bass line and the harmony. The expression is used in baroque music.The continuo is typically a cello or viola da gamba, which plays the bass line, and a harpsichord, which plays the bass line and harmony. The continuo may also be played on a small organ, theorbo, lute, harp, double bass or violone.Thus a Handel sonata for violin will be played by a violin on the solo part, with cello and harpsichord as the continuo group.
Because you play them all with strings
A basso is a bass singer, especially in opera, or an instrumental part written for a bass instrument.
Several instruments make use of both bass and tenor clefs. The most common ones I can think of presently are the cello and the bassoon. Much of the time, music is written in bass clef, but can change when the passage to be played moves up to a higher register where tenor clef would be appropriate.
The basso continuo is the "underpinning" of a piece. The cello would have played the lowest voice line. A harpsichord or another keyboard instrument would have added chord figures along with the bass line to support the other music being played along with it.
All of the strings are part of the violin family. Basically the double bass, cello, and viola are the violin's relatives. The piano and the harp are also considered string instruments.