The sound a tuba makes is often spelled as "oom" or "oompah." These phonetic representations capture the deep, resonant tones produced by the instrument. The term "oompah" is commonly associated with the rhythmic style of music often played by brass bands, where the tuba provides a bass line.
makes a highh piched noise
You blow into it with a large "raspberry" type fassion, tightening your lips to get a higher pitch.
make a tuba sound like a flute or get a voice changer...edit the sound on computer,put wax paper over the sound holes...it's a very weird answer...to an odd question
deep, powerful and dramatic
A tuba makes a sound when the musician buzzes their lips into the mouth piece. The buzzing plus exhaling breath sends vibrational waves of air through the tuba eventually exiting through the bell of the tuba as the noise you hear. The pitch is controlled by how tightly the musician buzzes and the length of horn the vibrational wave must travel, which can be changed by using different combinations of valves. The volume is changed by how hard the musician exhales into the tuba.
makes a highh piched noise
makes a highh piched noise
As far as I know(i'm in band) it is the Tuba.
you buzz into the mouthpiece and it makes the instrument vibrate which produces sound
they have to fart in a tuba and it makes a beautiful sound but the smell isn't to great.
rowr!
The sound a flute makes is typically spelled as "whistle" or "flutey."
The sound a penguin makes is typically spelled "hok hok" or "bray."
You blow into it with a large "raspberry" type fassion, tightening your lips to get a higher pitch.
The Contra-bassoon is 18 feet of tubing and can produce a lower pitch than a tuba, but is a rare instrument and I am not 100 percent sure it produces the lowest sound of any musical instrument.
Varooooom
The sound a buzzer makes when the answer is wrong is typically spelled as "bzzz" or "buzz."