It depends, if both players can read bass clef then yes as both instruments (like all) play in concert pitch whilst in bass clef.
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.
Well what kind of Baritone? Theres Baritone Tuba, Baritone Sax. I don't play the baritone tuba usually, but in orchestra sometimes I do, and I mastered the thing in about 5 months. I play the baritone saxophone and I learned how to play in about 1 month.
Baritone horn, Sousaphone, Euphonium, Contrabass bugle, and Alto Horn
Trumpet, Trombone, Baritone, Tuba... That's all I got
Usually the Trombone, Baritone, Euphonium, Tuba, Bass Clarinet, Baritone Sax all play in bass clef.
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.
Well what kind of Baritone? Theres Baritone Tuba, Baritone Sax. I don't play the baritone tuba usually, but in orchestra sometimes I do, and I mastered the thing in about 5 months. I play the baritone saxophone and I learned how to play in about 1 month.
Baritone horn, Sousaphone, Euphonium, Contrabass bugle, and Alto Horn
piano,bass guitar, and the cello all read bass clef
Trumpet, Trombone, Baritone, Tuba... That's all I got
Usually the Trombone, Baritone, Euphonium, Tuba, Bass Clarinet, Baritone Sax all play in bass clef.
There are many instruments that look the same as a tuba, but are a different size so produce notes at a different pitch. These include euphonium, baritone and tenor horn. Trumpets and cornets are like a very small tuba turned on its side.
French horn, trumpet, tuba, bar-sax (also part woodwind), baritone, euphonium (like baritone, but with straight top).
Bass clef generally. The Tuba is considered to be a non-transposing instrument, so a BBb, CC, EEb or F tuba will read from the same music and it is up to the player to know the correct fingerings. Sometimes (especially in Jazz charts) the parts are written an octave above the actual sounded note, the same as music for a Contrabass Violin (String Bass) or Bass Guitar. For what is called "British Brass Band Music" the Tuba part is usually transposed into the Treble Clef, so the part for a BBb tuba will look different than a part for an EEb tuba.
No. The tuba plays a full octave below the baritone (maybe two octaves, I can't remember). Also, baritone players typically read treble cleff music, but tuba players read bass cleff, and baritone is not a concert pitch instrument. On the other hand, the euphonium is a concert instrument and plays bass cleff music. However, that said, some baritone players can read bass cleff music.
He was my band instructor back in 1984-1987. He taught me how to play trumpet, tuba and baritone.
A baritone and a euphonium are really similar so the baritone is in the euphonium category or in the brass instruments category.