Depends on the instrument... but a woodwind
Woodwind
the trombone was originally called the sackbut but they changed the name. its the same instrument. TROMBONES ALL THE WAY!
saxophone, i assume.
It all depends on the instrument. Flautist Oboist English Hornist Clarinetist Saxophonist Bassoonist.
Australians play a very popular instrument that's in the woodwind family called the didgeridoo.
Clarinet
Depends on the instrument... but a woodwind
Woodwind
A reed
the trombone was originally called the sackbut but they changed the name. its the same instrument. TROMBONES ALL THE WAY!
saxophone, i assume.
The clarinet, a single-reeded instrument classifying it as a woodwind, and affectionately called a "licorice stick" by its users is normally used in symphony orchestras, jazz groups, or concert bands.
The Clarinet came from a town in Germany called Nuremburg by Johann Christoph Denner a German woodwind instrument maker.
It would be a part of the woodwind family but the fluteaphone is not a real instrument. The "fluteaphone", as many people call it, is actually called a recorder. The recorder is part of the woodwind family but can be made out of plastic, metal and/or wood.
It all depends on the instrument. Flautist Oboist English Hornist Clarinetist Saxophonist Bassoonist.
They are called woodwinds because of the reeds the reeds are made out of wood so therefore they are called woodwind instruments and brass instruments don't use use reeds so they are not woodwind instruments