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Q: What kind of speakers can you get more treble than bass from?
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What are guitar tone controls for?

Tone control adjust the bass, and treble. Treble makes the sound thin and high, and bass makes it lower and more full.


What is the name of the symbol use to describe a set of pitches?

Treble clef, or Bass clef. treble is more soprano and alto. when bass clef is obviously more bass baratone and somtimes tenor.


How many clefs are there?

Contrary to what most people believe (3 clefs: Bass, Treble, Alto), there are actually 7 that I know of. Yes, some are Treble, Bass, and Alto. But, there are four more: Soprano, Mezzo Soprano, Baritone, and Tenor. I believe Tenors usually use Baritone Clef though.


Which clef is pictured above?

Alto clef


What is a treble Cleff in music?

A symbol indicating that the second line from the bottom of a staff represents the pitch of G above middle C. It's the clef that woodwinds play in. Bass clef is played in by brass players. -kani92 A Treble Clef is a symbol which represents the high pitched notes. It is also called the G clef because it starts on the second line of the Staff or Stave.A staff or stave is 5 lines and 4 spaces on which music notes are written on.


Are triple and treble synonymous or why the use of treble outside music?

Yes. Triple and Treble both mean three times as much, though triple is more informal than treble. Treble in music originated as one of three clefs - that is treble, bass and alto. It is sometimes thought that treble in SATB originated in all male choirs with no soprano singers and young boys as altos, therefore being one of three as well.


What is gain knob for?

Gain is the INPUT volume of your guitar into the amp, drive select will select different types of distortion (or drive) and drive volume is the OUTPUT volume from the amp. Treble, Middle and Bass are all equalization knobs, turn the bass up for more bass in the signal and same applies with middle and treble or turn then down for less of the frequency in the signal


Why is bass clef superior to treble clef?

It is not. To expound a little, it isn't superior. Bass cleff is used so lower pitched instruments can more easily read the music. For instance, the bass guitar music was written in treble cleff, almost every note would have multiple ledger lines and be difficult to read.


Which surround system has the most bass?

Consider the Klipsch speakers for a more pronounced and filling bass. bose sound system bass pumps like no other. nice and clear sound, crisp bass


What all do you need to put more bass into a car?

Amplifiers and better speakers. But amplifiers are a must.


Will I get better sound and bass if I hook my Infinity Kappa Perfect speakers to a 100 watt amp?

You speakers will have a much more powerful depth in sound if you do that.


On a Baritone are bass clef notes lower than the treble clef?

yes. think of it as trumpet plays treble cleff. (high pitch instruments and sounds) trombone plays bass cleff (lower notes and sounds) The difference between the cleffs is 3 half steps (I believe) Typically bass cleff notes are lower but not always. It depends if the two are the same part. If you are asking about the treble clef baritone vs. bass clef baritone issue in bands, there's a catch: treble clef baritone players read notes written in the treble clef but the sound they make is actually a major 9th (octave + 1 whole step) lower. (E.g. if a treble-clef baritone player sees a middle C on the treble clef, the note that is actually played is a B-flat on the 2nd line from the bottom of the bass clef.) So actually, a bass-clef baritone part and a treble-clef baritone part from the same piece of music are probably identical in sound. They're just written differently. The reason: trumpet players, who usually play in a B-flat transposition (sounds a step lower, their written C comes out B-flat), can switch over to baritone more easily if they continue to read the same clef and finger the notes the same way. (Same thing is true of the saxophones, who all read basically the same range of the treble clef, finger more or less the same, but come out with sounds in very different registers.) It's pretty common, at least in U.S. schools, for baritone players to have started out as trumpet players, and this practice facilitates the switch. Most of the low brass world, though, uses untransposed bass clef--what you see is what you hear. Baritone players are well advised to learn bass clef as soon as possible. Still, they need to understand how the transposed treble-clef parts work--it's part of the environment.