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In a symphony orchestra in the brass section there are usually 3 trombones in proportion with 4 horns, 2 trumpets and a bass instrument. ref The Oxford Companion to Music, orchestra, page 898.Most of the time, an orchestra uses three trombones, with two tenors and one bass.
Tenor and bass trombones are found in an orchestra, though some pieces call for an alto as well.
Yes there is a contrabass, a bass, an alto, a valve, a Plastic.
Mostly trumpets and trombones, but occasionally you get really pounded by the percussion.
That song is called "76 Trombones," and it is from the musical "The Music Man."
Most of the time, an orchestra has three trombones, where it's two tenors and a bass.
They can be any. Ranging from Soprano, to Alto, to Tenor, to Bass, all the way to Contrabass.
The tuba, and other low brass e.g. trombones, mellophones...
Yes! The alto saxophone has a whole family of relatives. Some are the barri saxophone, the tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, bass saxophone and contra-bass saxophone. The sub-contra-bass saxophone, sopranino saxophone and soprillo saxophone are very uncommon and expensive also, you may never run across one.
The instrumental arrangement: a bass guitar, organ, strings, trumpets, trombones, and drums.
Tenor and bass, but there is sometimes an alto trombone too. In a section of three trombones, there will either be one of each, or two tenors and one bass.
It's called being a Trumpet player (: There is no technical phobia for being afraid of trombones, but there is "melophobia": the fear of music.