A Trombone has no valve- only a slide. A valve trombone, or a marching trombone, though, have three valves.
Trombones come in three keys * Alto Trombone is in the key of E * Tenor Trombone is Bb * Bass Trombone is F They do not have keys that change the notes, the notes are changed by adjusting the length of the slide. *yes, there ARE keys on a trombone. it is for a different kind of trombone called a valve trombone. there are three keys. to change the notes, you would play with either more or less air
Trombone is trombone in Italian.
Yes. There is an instrument called a "valve trombone", which basically looks like a trombone except that the slide doesn't move and there are three valves near the mouthpiece that look a lot like trumpet valves. In fact, trumpet players are often asked to play valve trombone in middle and high school jazz bands when no regular trombone players are around to fill the seat. This is possible because the fingerings on a valve trombone are exactly the same as those on a trumpet. Some trombone players, me included, find the valve trombone to have a somewhat flatter (tone, not pitch) sound than a traditional trombone. However, a good enough musician can easily achieve a beautiful sound on a valve trombone. Additionally, there is a horn called a marching trombone that also three valves. It is similar to a baritone, but the tubing length and bore sizes are closer to those of a trombone.
Switch from bass to treble clef and add three sharps/subtract three flats.
it is a professional trombone
Trombones come in three keys * Alto Trombone is in the key of E * Tenor Trombone is Bb * Bass Trombone is F They do not have keys that change the notes, the notes are changed by adjusting the length of the slide. *yes, there ARE keys on a trombone. it is for a different kind of trombone called a valve trombone. there are three keys. to change the notes, you would play with either more or less air
Trombones usually have zero valves. There's such a thing as a valve trombone, but that uses the standard three valve configuration, similar to a trumpet.
Trombone is trombone in Italian.
Jack Teagarden Bob Havens Tom Malone
A bigger trombone is usually a bass trombone.
Yes. There is an instrument called a "valve trombone", which basically looks like a trombone except that the slide doesn't move and there are three valves near the mouthpiece that look a lot like trumpet valves. In fact, trumpet players are often asked to play valve trombone in middle and high school jazz bands when no regular trombone players are around to fill the seat. This is possible because the fingerings on a valve trombone are exactly the same as those on a trumpet. Some trombone players, me included, find the valve trombone to have a somewhat flatter (tone, not pitch) sound than a traditional trombone. However, a good enough musician can easily achieve a beautiful sound on a valve trombone. Additionally, there is a horn called a marching trombone that also three valves. It is similar to a baritone, but the tubing length and bore sizes are closer to those of a trombone.
Switch from bass to treble clef and add three sharps/subtract three flats.
no. trombone is a musical instrument. I have not heard of a trombone sport before
it is a professional trombone
Tenor and bass, but there is sometimes an alto trombone too. In a section of three trombones, there will either be one of each, or two tenors and one bass.
The trombone player.
Most of the time, an orchestra has three trombones, where it's two tenors and a bass.