n x 2 or 2n
coz tuba players are cooler
No it is longer than a flute. Just by a couple of inches.
it depends on ur grade, u can get a book of scales for flute look 4 ameb flute scales it blue it'll REALLY help
This is the scale of F major on the flute: F G A Bb C D E F.
the flute
um i play a flute and if you are asking which one you should play, i would sugest playing the flute if you are good with your fingers and trumpet if you are best at um lets say sound control
n/2.
flute, you have to have your mouth a certain way for the trumpet but you only have to blow the flute
flute is a woodwind instrument while trumpet is not
The trumpet is a member of the brass family; the flute is a woodwind. A trumpet has valves, and a flute has keys. A trumpet is in the key of B flat, while a flute is a C instrument. Much about them is different, but the similarity is that they are both metallic.
The Flute is in the Woodwind section/family and the Trumpet is in the Brass section/family.
flute
the lenght of both instruments can differ, but a flute is usually longer than a trumpet
clarienet trobone flute saxophone trupet snare drums ..................any more
There is very little similarity between a trumpet and a flute other than that they are both musical instruments, they are both constructed of metal (but different metals), and they both use air in motion to produce sound. The trumpet, however, is usually placed with the horns, or brass instruments, while the flute is considered a woodwind. The mouthpiece of the trumpet is blown directly into, the flute is blown across. The trumpet uses valves to alter the pitch, the flute, keys. The trumpet usually starts at F# (below middle C) and has a range of 2 1/2 octaves. The flute begins at middle C with a range of 3 octaves. The trumpet uses an exponentially flared horn at the exit end to amplify sound. The flute uses no amplification system. The air channel of the trumpet is coiled, the flute, straight.
yes
Tenor Saxophone