One. They come in various sizes.
I believe that a Piccolo does not have a reed but instead a mouthpiece.
Saxophone is not bad for your health. I know this following part from being a player of the saxophone myself. Now, when you exale air, that is not a health hazard either. If you use flavord reeds, that will make you breath differently. I REALLY hope this helps its preety good for ur health azz long azz u dnt eat it
A single reed instruments makes noise by vibrating the reed against the mouthpiece, a double reed instruments makes its noice by 2 reeds vibrating together. Happy Playing! musictheory1@hotmail.com
Reeds are delicate, and in many cases, expensive. Simply brushing a reed against clothing could tear apart the thin, delicate end. Reed guards can prevent accidental damage when the instrument is not being played.
Well yes and no. When you finger a note on alto and tenor the notes in the relative key (Bb for tenor and Eb for alto) are fingered the same way. So a C on an alto and a C on a tenor are fingered the same way, but sound different. On tenor it's a concert Bb, when on alto it's a concert Eb. But for fingering purposes and just generally learning the instrument, yes.
If you mean "reeds" no, trumpets do no use reeds. Some woodwind instruments use reeds, like the saxophone, clarinet, and oboe.
Yes, you'll want to do this.
Zero. None. Trombones use no reeds.
I believe that a Piccolo does not have a reed but instead a mouthpiece.
Saxophone is not bad for your health. I know this following part from being a player of the saxophone myself. Now, when you exale air, that is not a health hazard either. If you use flavord reeds, that will make you breath differently. I REALLY hope this helps its preety good for ur health azz long azz u dnt eat it
A single reed instruments makes noise by vibrating the reed against the mouthpiece, a double reed instruments makes its noice by 2 reeds vibrating together. Happy Playing! musictheory1@hotmail.com
Reeds are delicate, and in many cases, expensive. Simply brushing a reed against clothing could tear apart the thin, delicate end. Reed guards can prevent accidental damage when the instrument is not being played.
Well yes and no. When you finger a note on alto and tenor the notes in the relative key (Bb for tenor and Eb for alto) are fingered the same way. So a C on an alto and a C on a tenor are fingered the same way, but sound different. On tenor it's a concert Bb, when on alto it's a concert Eb. But for fingering purposes and just generally learning the instrument, yes.
Brass instruments do not have reeds, some woodwind instruments do.
The saxophone is actually a member of the woodwind family because it produces sound through a reed vibrating against the mouthpiece, similar to other woodwind instruments like the clarinet. While it is made of brass, its classification is based on its method of sound production rather than its material.
use every key on the saxophone
The saxophone is a single-reed wind instrument, that comes in several voices, including the alto saxophone and the tenor saxophone.