Amplitude
Yes. They have definite pitches.
Harmony can be used in both singing and instruments it when different pitches are put together it is a chord formed by the melody and the instruments/singers playing/singing higher than the melody instrument(s)/singer(s)
They can be both high and low pitch. There are brass instruments that are considered "high voices" like trumpets, there are brass instruments that are considered "middle voices" like french horns, and then there are brass instruments that are considered "low voices" like trombones, euphoniums, and tubas. All brass instruments have a pretty large range of pitches they can play depending on how good the player is, so the pitches can greatly vary.
Yes, MuseScore has can play pitches from other instruments besides piano. Refer to the SoundFont page in the official handbook: http://musescore.org/en/handbook/soundfont You'll also find more help and quicker responses on the MuseScore forum: http://musescore.org/en/forum
Tubular Bells is arguably the finest conglomeration of instruments concerted together to form a single unit piece. A instruments combine to create multitude rhythms, tones, pitches that all fuse into each other. The tracks that are on the album is Tubular Bells Part 1 on side A and Tubular Part 2 on side B. All video length are until 25 minutes on each tracks.
sound quality
amplitude
Yes. They have definite pitches.
No, violas and violins are completely different instruments with different pitches.
From the simple drums, to fuly strung instruments, to instruments played by blowing into them with only 3 keys, they have elvolved to show us that people can make instruments of different pitches, and in different clefs.
Harmony can be used in both singing and instruments it when different pitches are put together it is a chord formed by the melody and the instruments/singers playing/singing higher than the melody instrument(s)/singer(s)
They can be both high and low pitch. There are brass instruments that are considered "high voices" like trumpets, there are brass instruments that are considered "middle voices" like french horns, and then there are brass instruments that are considered "low voices" like trombones, euphoniums, and tubas. All brass instruments have a pretty large range of pitches they can play depending on how good the player is, so the pitches can greatly vary.
There are many possibilities. One group of scientists would maintain that the mixing of pitches through the interference would destabilize the polymotric grid matrix causing illateral instability, but others insist that this type of monolatrism is impossible due to the cosmological constant. This disagreement has been characterized by bloodshed and feuds among physiclists for centurions.
Larger instruments produce lower pitches; the Bass Clarinet, being one of the largest types of clarinets, produces one of the lowest sound.
The low-pitched range is the tone that describes types of tones brass instruments produce. Requiring a long air column or string usually, to produce low pitches, the largest instruments in their families or instrument classes are the string and wind bass instruments.
Arpeggio
music