The Saxophone makes a mix-between woodwind and brass sound. The saxophone has a unique sound though and it varies between which type of saxophone or even the player.
The saxophone generally makes a smooth-bold sound, but it may be hard to understand this in words. Bold in this case would be rich, filled, similar to a bold coffee. Certain people like bold coffees and certain people like a little weaker coffee, or an airier saxophone sound.
Go to amazon and search for "Kenny G". You will hear the saxaphone!
Just off the top of my head, without doing any research, some songs with saxaphone are:
Beach Boys "Kokomo"
Numerous Hall & Oats songs (such as "Maneater")
Billy Ocean "Caribbean Queen" (solo in the bridge section)
Huey Lewis and the News "Heart of Rock and Roll" (solo in the bridge section)
Pink Floyd "Money" (solo in the bridge section) and throughout the following song "Us and Them" and the rest of the "Dark Side of the Moon" album (which EVERY music lover MUST own).
This is kind of fun... any other music questions? Anyone? :)
It all depends on the mouthpiece, reed, and the horn itself. They're all designed for different sounds. With the right equipment and skills you can make a warm, beautiful classical sound or an upbeat, brassy jazz sound.
Or if you'd rather, you can make it literally sound like a piece of crap, as Kenny G and David Sanborn like to do.
A saxphone is called a ''woodwind'' because to make a sound it needs a ''reed'' whitch is made out of wood.
A saxphone is called a ''woodwind'' because to make a sound it needs a ''reed'' whitch is made out of wood.
The strings that are on the guitar make the sound play. If you think about it, almost every instrument something vibrates to make a sound. In a saxophone, when you blow into the mouthpiece, it makes the reed move. When you hit a violin, it causes the string to move.
Yes. A saxophone is made of brass but makes sound by a vibrating reed like a clarinet.
No. The saxophone and clarinet are totally different voices, else one of the instruments could simply be eliminated.
A saxphone is called a ''woodwind'' because to make a sound it needs a ''reed'' whitch is made out of wood.
From the standpoint of quantum physics, there is no sound until there is an observer, so based on that, the answer would be none.
A saxophone created sound by the reed. The reed on the mouthpiece vibrates. which generates a sound to be blown through the instrument. The type of sound that is registered depends on the current fingering being used.
Just practice in music books about the saxophone.
A saxphone is called a ''woodwind'' because to make a sound it needs a ''reed'' whitch is made out of wood.
The saxophone is a woodwind instrument. It is played with a reed, not a mouthpiece.
The strings that are on the guitar make the sound play. If you think about it, almost every instrument something vibrates to make a sound. In a saxophone, when you blow into the mouthpiece, it makes the reed move. When you hit a violin, it causes the string to move.
It kind of depends on the saxophone. Maybe an alto or baritone saxophone would be about the same pitch or lower. A tenor saxophone definitely would sound lower.
The Alto Saxophone is a rich and lovely sound wich echoes but iit can hurt a dogs ears when it reaches an extremly high pich noise.
By blowing down one end.
Yes. A saxophone is made of brass but makes sound by a vibrating reed like a clarinet.
This is my opinion. I think that the saxophone is a very complicated instrument. I wouldn't recommend it to ppl who want a soothing instrument. Saxophone has a more of a blaring sound. But some people like it. I personally like the flute better. Its sound is sooo much more soothing and relaxing.