Brass instruments can be pitched into any key.
Ab (G#) trumpets are not impossible, but probably not that common.
I personally own trumpets in
Tuba, it is the longest so it creates the lowest tones. In order it would be tuba, baritone and trombone. Baritone and trombone are basically the same but baritone sounds a bit better at the lowest part of its range.
playing flat and sharp notes is easy . it is not different than playng any other notes, you just have to learn the fingering. for instance B is played pressing the middle valve. for B Flat press 1st valve. open any trumpet book - its there. you may also find it with other trumpet techniques. Danny Carney - www.playthetrumpet.com
Yes, the trumpet 1 part is normally harder than trumpet 2 or 3 and normally the best player or players play on the first trumpet part.
Larger (longer and wider) pipes have a lower resonant frequency than smaller ones. The typical "trumpet" (which is often actually a cornet) plays about two octaves higher than a typical tuba.
There is no certain "best trumpet player", but there are recordings of players "screaming" as high as 5 octaves above staff. Screaming refers to the type of sound the trumpet makes at those pitches.
Nope. The double bass is a few octaves lower than the trumpet.
Assuming you mean "tuba" and assuming you mean "why does the tuba play lower notes than the trumpet," the basic answer is, because the tuba is longer (it has more tubing).
Tuba, it is the longest so it creates the lowest tones. In order it would be tuba, baritone and trombone. Baritone and trombone are basically the same but baritone sounds a bit better at the lowest part of its range.
playing flat and sharp notes is easy . it is not different than playng any other notes, you just have to learn the fingering. for instance B is played pressing the middle valve. for B Flat press 1st valve. open any trumpet book - its there. you may also find it with other trumpet techniques. Danny Carney - www.playthetrumpet.com
Yes, the trumpet 1 part is normally harder than trumpet 2 or 3 and normally the best player or players play on the first trumpet part.
Larger (longer and wider) pipes have a lower resonant frequency than smaller ones. The typical "trumpet" (which is often actually a cornet) plays about two octaves higher than a typical tuba.
There is no certain "best trumpet player", but there are recordings of players "screaming" as high as 5 octaves above staff. Screaming refers to the type of sound the trumpet makes at those pitches.
F sharp and G flat are the same. F sharp is a half octave up from a F and a G flat is a half octave lower than a G.
As a general rule, when a part indicates "Trumpet" it is for the b-flat trumpet, so there is no difference. Depending on where you play, you may sometimes see a part for "trumpet in C" or some other key, but unless you play in a symphonic orchestra, that isn't all that common.
F#
The trumpet is much smaller than the tuba, hence it has a higher pitch.
G# is one semitone lower than A.