Yes, the mouthpiece for any instrument in the brass family (tuba, Trumpet, Trombone, frenchhorn etc) use a metal mouthpiece. It is shaped like a funnel. You put your lips on it and buzz them to make the sound. The only "brass*" that doesn't use a metal mouth is a Saxophone. It has a plastic or hard rubber mouthpiece.
* it's not really a brass. It's actually a woodwind but most of it is made of brass and a lot of people mistake for being part of the brass family.
short string plucked hard
Bill Clinton played the tenor saxophone.
The soprillo saxophone.
The saxophone repertoire is any music written for saxophone, or transcribed for saxophone. This makes this music specific to saxophone and therefore playable on saxophone. Popular classical saxophone repertoire includes such pieces as Concerto-Glazunov, Concertino da Camera-Ibert, Sonata-Creston, Scaramouche-Milhaud.
adolphe sax invented the alto saxophone first, i believe
Well, first of all the violin is a string instrument while the saxophone is a wood wind instrument because it has a reed. Second, the violin is played with a bow (arco) or sometimes plucked (pizzicato), while the saxophone is played by the player blowing air into a mouth piece. Last, the Violin is an orchestral instrument while the saxophone is a band instrument. There are many other reasons as to what makes these instruments different, but these are a start...
The past participle of "pluck" is "plucked."
Un saxophone (masculine noun)
short string plucked hard
Bill Clinton played the tenor saxophone.
the children plucked the flower
Tubax saxophone or the Sub-Contrabass Saxophone
are there changes in the note when you plucked the stretch band
There is no such thing as a plucker on a saxophone because i know a saxophone inside and out.
The saxophone is a single-reed wind instrument, that comes in several voices, including the alto saxophone and the tenor saxophone.
The soprillo saxophone.
The word you're looking for is... plucked.