Tenor Sax
There's not a lot of difference in the finger spacing. Even though the keys that open and close are further apart, the finger touches are placed almost as close together.
the alto flute
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.
bass tenor alto surprano
High Tenor, almost a Countertenor.
soprano
I've never heard of a male alto. The only male voice categories I've heard are... Male Soprano | Counter-Tenor | Tenor | Baritone | Bass With Females... Soprano | Mezzo-Soprano or Alto | Contralto or Female Tenor
the alto flute
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.
bass tenor alto surprano
No. It may be possible to force an alto mouthpiece on a tenor neck or to seal a tenor mouthpiece on an alto neck, but the sax won't play properly in tune with the wrong size mouthpiece.
High Tenor, almost a Countertenor.
soprano
You don't
Alejandro: Tenor Bridgette: Soprano Cody: Tenor Courtney: Soprano DJ: Baritone Duncan: Tenor Ezekiel: Tenor Gwen: Alto Harold: Tenor Heather: Mezzo-Soprano Izzy: Alto LeShawna: Alto Lindsay: Soprano Noah: Baritone Owen: Tenor Sierra: Soprano Tyler: Tenor
In this analogy, "blank" is to "alto" as "tenor" is to "bass." The relationship between alto and tenor is that they are both voice types within a choir or vocal ensemble, with alto typically singing higher than tenor. Similarly, bass is the counterpart to tenor, with bass voices typically singing lower than tenor voices. The analogy is drawing a parallel between the relationships of voice types within a vocal ensemble.
(from lowest to highest) baritone, tenor, alto, and finally soprano. -- The lowest mail singing voice is the Bass. then Baritone, then tenor and counter tenor. In a mixed choir its Bass, tenor alto and then soprano
Tenor