The instrument that occupies the tenor and bass sections of the woodwinds is the bassoon. The tenoroon, a smaller version of the bassoon, is often included in ensembles as well. These instruments provide rich, low tones that complement the higher woodwinds in orchestral and chamber music settings.
Yes, it uses a reed to make a tone. Other woodwinds include, clarinets, flutes, bassoon, oboe.
Soprano: flute, piccolo, oboe, clarinet, soprano saxophone. Alto: english horn, alto saxophone. Tenor: tenor saxophone, alto clarinet (despite its name, it is usually used as a tenor instrument). Bass: bassoon, contrabassoon, bass/contrabass clarinets, baritone saxophones. Of course, since woodwind instruments typically have a greater range than human voices, there is considerable overlap between parts. Bassoons frequently play the tenor part, and clarinets often play the alto part.
None, actually. With transposition, most woodwinds read in treble, while a few read bass. Sometimes bassoons use tenor clef.
the tenor saxophone is woodwind insterment
Well it depends on the type of saxophone your talking about. The Soprano and Alto Sax are woodwind instruments, while the Bari Sax & The Tenor Sax are low brass instruments.well it also does count as a wood wind instrument no matter what because it has a reed used to perform sounds.
No but a tenor horn is.
Yes. The Alto is an Eb instrument where the Tenor is a Bb instrument. The Alto plays one octave above Baritone and the Tenor one octave above Bass.
The Tenor Saxophone, like me =D
Tenor clef does of course exist, and can be used by bassoon.
yes you can
tenor saxophone
Joy Harjo plays the Tenor Saxophone.