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1) Violin, 2) Flute, 3) Clarinet, 4) Guitar, 5) Saxophone
No. The saxophone and clarinet are totally different voices, else one of the instruments could simply be eliminated.
Yes. A saxophone is made of brass but makes sound by a vibrating reed like a clarinet.
It sounds very loud and jazzy. I play it myself. It's awesome
The volume of a saxophone is loud because it is made of brass, even though it is in the woodwind family. It is in the wood wind family because it uses a reed and uses all ten fingers to play. P.S. A twelve year old wrote this and i am a clarinet player never a sax just a clarinet!! CLARINET RULES
1) Violin, 2) Flute, 3) Clarinet, 4) Guitar, 5) Saxophone
No. The saxophone and clarinet are totally different voices, else one of the instruments could simply be eliminated.
Yes. A saxophone is made of brass but makes sound by a vibrating reed like a clarinet.
The bass clarinet add a different sound to the harmonies. Rather than the trombone or bass guitar, and bass saxophone . Its a different bass sound .
It sounds very loud and jazzy. I play it myself. It's awesome
The volume of a saxophone is loud because it is made of brass, even though it is in the woodwind family. It is in the wood wind family because it uses a reed and uses all ten fingers to play. P.S. A twelve year old wrote this and i am a clarinet player never a sax just a clarinet!! CLARINET RULES
I play clarinet, saxophone, and flute, and I would definitely say that saxophone is the easiest of all three. It takes a good amount of air and muscle support around the mouth to get a good sound, but in the end it is the most free-blowing woodwind and requires the least amount of control to at least get a decent sound.
The unique souNd is caused by the reed and the material of which the clarinet is made. This is why a wooden clarinet sounds nicer and tends to resonate more than a plastic one and that is why all professional clarinetists use wooden not plastic clarinets.
snare drum, timpani, cymbals, bass drum
Yes, a flat, cane reed. The mouthpiece and reed is almost identical to the one used in a clarinet. The biggest difference in sound is because the sax is made of brass, and has a lot of flared tubing. The clarinet is grenadilla wood, and is straight tubed.
No, they do not. When a clarinet player plays a "C" it actually sounds a "B-flat". The two instruments can play together if the clarinet part is written a whole step higher than the piano part.
Reeds are what clarinet, saxophone, oboe, and bassoon players use to make sound on their instruments. These reeds are typically a very pale yellow color and flat.