Trombone and euphonium/baritone.
In an orchestra, the instruments that use a mouthpiece include brass instruments such as the trumpet, trombone, tuba, and French horn, as well as woodwinds like the clarinet and saxophone. The mouthpiece is crucial for producing sound, as it helps create vibrations in the air column within the instrument. Each mouthpiece is designed specifically for its respective instrument to achieve the desired tone and range.
Umm... Yes. Most common size in the 12c, however more advanced players use larger deeper mouthpiece to get a better sound/tone
The trombone is the only instrument in the brass section with no keys or valves. It only has a slide.
No, they are entirely different sizes and use different reeds. The Bb only refers to how they are tuned according to a standard concert orchestra of instruments relative to each other, but the bass clarinet is a full octave lower - larger mouthpiece.
Trombone and euphonium/baritone.
In an orchestra, the instruments that use a mouthpiece include brass instruments such as the trumpet, trombone, tuba, and French horn, as well as woodwinds like the clarinet and saxophone. The mouthpiece is crucial for producing sound, as it helps create vibrations in the air column within the instrument. Each mouthpiece is designed specifically for its respective instrument to achieve the desired tone and range.
Umm... Yes. Most common size in the 12c, however more advanced players use larger deeper mouthpiece to get a better sound/tone
That's correct.
The trombone is the only instrument in the brass section with no keys or valves. It only has a slide.
No, they are entirely different sizes and use different reeds. The Bb only refers to how they are tuned according to a standard concert orchestra of instruments relative to each other, but the bass clarinet is a full octave lower - larger mouthpiece.
The trombone has a slide that can be moved to change the pitch of notes rather than valves or keys that lengthen the tubing to change the pitch of notes like other brass instruments. And there are a lot more than 3 other brass instruments.
Trombones were made as the first chromatic instruments. Slides were easier to invent than valves thus the trombone (or rather its ancestor, the sackbut) was the first instrument that could use notes other than the fundamental harmonic series.
trumpets, trombones, saxophones, clarinets, oboes, and bassoons all use mouthpieces.
Its not the instrument, but the person that is in control.
A tuba does not use a reed; it is a brass instrument. Tubas produce sound through the vibration of the player's lips in the mouthpiece, similar to other brass instruments. Reeds are typically associated with woodwind instruments, such as clarinets and saxophones.
Yes, the mouthpiece for any instrument in the brass family (tuba, trumpet, trombone, frenchhorn etc) use a metal mouthpiece. It is shaped like a funnel. You put your lips on it and buzz them to make the sound. The only "brass*" that doesn't use a metal mouth is a saxophone. It has a plastic or hard rubber mouthpiece. * it's not really a brass. It's actually a woodwind but most of it is made of brass and a lot of people mistake for being part of the brass family.