A flute
A bass clarinet, like all the different types of clarinets in it's family, have one reed.
1 Flute 2 Oboes (or optional Clarinets in A) 2 Bassoons (or optional Bass Clarinets in B-Flat) 2 Horns in F Violin Viola Cello Contrabass and i think there's a keyboard instrument.
There are flutes, piccolos, clarinets, oboes, bass clarinets, bassoons, and all saxophones. Most school bands only have alto and tenor saxophones, maybe a bari-sax, and rarely a soprano saxophone.
Thaey are made by Maybach.
A flute
When Adolphe Sax was experimenting with Bass Clarinets, he accidentally invented the Baritone Saxophone in 1840.
Go to the person that fixes bass clarinets
While there were earlier attempts to make bass clarinets, the bass clarinet in the form we know it today was first made by Adolphe Sax, around 1838. He invented the Saxophone a few years later, patenting it in 1846.
A bass clarinet, like all the different types of clarinets in it's family, have one reed.
They are super awesome and mega popular!!!
yes
No. Clarinets are in Trebel clef, Baritones are in Bass Clef
Clarinets play in treble clef.
Bass clarinets play in orchestras because orchestras sometimes play pieces that are scored for bass clarinet, or have bass clarinet parts in it. One example of a piece like that is The Rite Of Spring, by Igor Stravinsky. It has significant solos and duets by the bass clarinet, and "the show cannot go on" without the bass clarinet. But most pieces, do not have bass clarinet parts, so the bass clarinet is rarely seen in orchestras today.
Clarinets weren't invented until the 1700's
yes (its in the same key)