Examples of treble sounds are guitar tones, female voice (such as soprano ), young boy voice, etc.
Bass almost always is used with treble sounds made by instruments such as a guitar, piano, a high singing voice, trumpet, or harmonica.
Boys were then responsible for contributing a treble sound to church music, since women were typically barred from the performance of sacred music in a public (gender mixed) context.
At the same time, a capacitor between the slider of the volume control and the output, allows treble sounds to bleed through while damping mid and lower ranges.
These two membranes are dissimilar in width to allow for the production of both bass and treble sounds from the same drum.
These two membranes (drum heads) are same in width to allow for the production of bass from one and treble sound from the other.
This gave the bass a stronger treble sound to compete with the Rickenbacker bass, which had been introduced in 1957 and was famously "bright."
It is usually accompanied by a metal vase, played with the other hand, to produce the treble sounds.
Yet the treble sound is clear too.
Zebbler uses the live bass and treble sounds during each show to trigger live visual events, included pre-made 3-D art, closed circuit cameras, and other visual effects.