Nice video! I would like to ask if you heard The Jam of Boston at Voodoo Fest in October? Alex sung really low part here, might it be useful for you? I also heard that "Opposite sides of *my* double life" in the second verse of Anyways is the lowest thing he ever did.
@@brubarurno Did you read my last comment paying attetion? I told you i agree that doesn't count, why do you still with that? He has other F2 and sung (i told you also)
@@brubarurno Now i changed my mind, i'm taking experience these years, and in these moment the fact Alex's probably forcing his lows was enough to make me believe that thing count as an intention (musical or not) whatever, it doesn't change the range at the end
Actually Are not exactly Yelps! Some of his highest notes certainly aren't sung or melodic, as F5 or the G5, but the sustain it's definitely there, they're controlled notes though doesn't enter into the area of his melodic range it does into his total vocal range
slyfoot soldier I watched the clips, and honestly, they were so short and so limited in scope that I can’t tell. I’m not a total expert at this thing. Your voice sounds manipulated, because you’re trying to sound like the dude from Three Day’s Grace, which is not a good thing to do because his technique isn’t healthy by any means. I would suggest taking voice lessons with a professional vocal coach. You’re only 19 and your voice is still maturing. Pushing your voice beyond its capabilities as an untrained singer is dangerous and vocal damage before your voice is even finished developing could end your relationship with singing for good. The best way to give people an idea of your voice type is to do a series of scales in the third and fourth octave with a clean, clear tone without manipulation (no tightening your jaw, grinding your teeth, pushing your larynx down, opening your mouth SUPER wide, and pulling your tongue back) in the “Aah” vowel with moderate volume. A good example to go by is Matt Nathanson (clean voice, unmanipulated, like his speaking voice) and the guy in this video: ua-cam.com/video/ySeMtPm0pl8/v-deo.html I know you like that style of music and style of singing, but it could possibly not be what your voice was made for. You might be a Tenor. Post a video of you doing scales cleanly and you’ll get better feedback (also Reddit’s singing subreddit will help you as well).
AJRA okay man...I'm not trying to soud like him anymore. I was but now I have many influences from different singers, even if Adam Gontier is the biggest influence on me. I'm trying combine different techniques from modern singers to creat my own unique voice. I don't have a good vocal coach anywhere nearby so I tried to take some help from you at guessing my voice type. Btw, even I think I'm a tenor voice type. My voice sits kind of in the middle. Thank you!
U can really see how much more al has started to realise his falsetto in the last few years, really has matured vocally
Patrick yeah, in the last album, probably there are more falsettos that in the five previus together haha
Anyways B-side
At 1:02 he hit a brief G#2 and a solid F#2
Hey I really find these videos interesting. Is it weird to ask if you can do the vocal range of Gerard Way?
Nice video! I would like to ask if you heard The Jam of Boston at Voodoo Fest in October? Alex sung really low part here, might it be useful for you?
I also heard that "Opposite sides of *my* double life" in the second verse of Anyways is the lowest thing he ever did.
Thanks for the info, i'll look for that jam session :D, and yeah, Anyways note is F#2
Alex Tenor
Best name
Baritone for sure
4:43 i think that i'm wrong the lowest tops at E2 :o
Updated and it was 5 years ago. Wow
The voice in Ravey Ravey Ravey Club is by Glyn Jones
Really? Sounds Alex's young voice
@@hectorcheivz4113 It is. Glyn Jones never played live, he left in 2002.
Hi! Can you please tell me what does this mean in octaves? :)
3 octaves and one note!
Kata Kálmán 3.2 octaves
Jesus did you actually count random mumbling from an interview lmfao
Just for the clear tone, i agree doesn't count, altough he hits a a sung F2 while he' singing "Anna" in an interview
@@hectorcheivz4113 that still makes absolutely no sense in context and is in no way of incidence to a singer's vocal range
@@brubarurno Did you read my last comment paying attetion? I told you i agree that doesn't count, why do you still with that? He has other F2 and sung (i told you also)
@@hectorcheivz4113 I did, doesn't explain why you'd put it in the video.
@@brubarurno Now i changed my mind, i'm taking experience these years, and in these moment the fact Alex's probably forcing his lows was enough to make me believe that thing count as an intention (musical or not) whatever, it doesn't change the range at the end
Are you sure that in Balaclava he reach high notes such as C5? Aren't B4s? Thanks!
Wesley Scolmeister Yes there are many B4s but i remember pitch a brief C5 in these part, but now i'm not sure haha you make me doubt it
Lots of these are just yells, not sustained notes. A lot of the higher notes I don't think can really be called in his "range"
Actually Are not exactly Yelps! Some of his highest notes certainly aren't sung or melodic, as F5 or the G5, but the sustain it's definitely there, they're controlled notes though doesn't enter into the area of his melodic range it does into his total vocal range
What about the backing vocals in brick by brick?
Max probably is Nick
or Mattybae
i doubt it Matt has a light voice, Nick has a good lows
It's most likely Nick, he has better lows than Matt and Alex
Baritone?
He’s a Spinto Tenor. His passaggi are C#4 and F#4, and he lacks ease and density on the low notes.
AJRA awesome...could you take a guess at mine?
slyfoot soldier I watched the clips, and honestly, they were so short and so limited in scope that I can’t tell. I’m not a total expert at this thing.
Your voice sounds manipulated, because you’re trying to sound like the dude from Three Day’s Grace, which is not a good thing to do because his technique isn’t healthy by any means. I would suggest taking voice lessons with a professional vocal coach. You’re only 19 and your voice is still maturing. Pushing your voice beyond its capabilities as an untrained singer is dangerous and vocal damage before your voice is even finished developing could end your relationship with singing for good.
The best way to give people an idea of your voice type is to do a series of scales in the third and fourth octave with a clean, clear tone without manipulation (no tightening your jaw, grinding your teeth, pushing your larynx down, opening your mouth SUPER wide, and pulling your tongue back) in the “Aah” vowel with moderate volume.
A good example to go by is Matt Nathanson (clean voice, unmanipulated, like his speaking voice) and the guy in this video:
ua-cam.com/video/ySeMtPm0pl8/v-deo.html
I know you like that style of music and style of singing, but it could possibly not be what your voice was made for. You might be a Tenor. Post a video of you doing scales cleanly and you’ll get better feedback (also Reddit’s singing subreddit will help you as well).
AJRA okay man...I'm not trying to soud like him anymore. I was but now I have many influences from different singers, even if Adam Gontier is the biggest influence on me. I'm trying combine different techniques from modern singers to creat my own unique voice. I don't have a good vocal coach anywhere nearby so I tried to take some help from you at guessing my voice type. Btw, even I think I'm a tenor voice type. My voice sits kind of in the middle. Thank you!
prefer noto dude you checked out my voice a few days ago...remember? Adam Gontier covers...