Whaaa same (me in 7th grade) :i joined choir and then i realized i can sing soprano, but i stopped going, Maybe its 7 days straight and I don't know the techniques when singing so I'm singin in my throat and it made me dizzy so i stopped But after a year passed and I'm in grade 8 i joined again but I'm not soprano, i can sing bass too sooo I joined the bass
That's really false, basses are not rare as people except, the bass range is between E2 and F#4, most basses are lyric basses, but they are not ultra-rare, and they are not "very low baritone" they are not the most common voice type with varies between countries, in italia, the most common male voice is tenor for instance. Teh other type of what people consider the bass voice is the basso profundo voice witch usually sing between D2 and F4 (sometimes C2) but it's just the less common bass voice type, so stop saying bullshit about bass voice and baritone voice (baritone is a quite high voice type)
I didn't say all Basses, I said most blokes who consider themselves to be "Basses" will probably be shocked to find that their true voices actually lie somewhere towards the lower end of the Baritone range, and not in the Bass range, as they once assumed. We've got a "Bass" section in the choir what I'm part of, but I can tell ya now that only one of the blokes in that particular section's a true Bass. The rest are low Baris, who are trying to sing in the Bass register. I'm saying that sometimes, a particular piece of music calls for a singer to transgress their legit vocal-range. I know a fellow Bari when I hear one, being a Bari, meself- (even though I'm at the higher end of the Baritone range!) We've also got Mezzo-sopranos in our choir who have to blag it as either a Soprano or an Alto, 'cos we've got no Mezzo section. We've also got no Bari section either, so the Baritones among us have to blag it as either a Tenor or a Bass, even though that ain't our legit tessitura. Maybe you misunderstood what I was saying, maybe I didn't make what I was saying clear enough, or maybe, I'm just coming from a choir point-of-view, as opposed to a soloist's point-of-view. That said, most of our so-called "Basses" are low Baris, so I weren't talking shit at all, thank you! Peace and love.
Dr. Dan: “misclasification is a problem when singers insist on singing outside their range” Me, a “lady tenor”: I wanna sing soprano and you can’t stop me.
3:15 I'd rather say most female pop songs are written for the Alto range. They rarely go above a D#5 or E5 and if, it's usually strongly belted. And they also go really low, like to a G3 or F3. Male pop songs are mostly written in tenor range and the singers use falsetto often, so when men and women sing in a duet they often even sing in the same range.
You are correct, pop songs are written for a generic "Alto" (low female range). The typical lowest note is F3, very rarely E3 (low mezzo soprano note). Just so you know a real Contralto voice easily goes down to D3 and many go lower, as Toni Braxton does in "Unbreak My Heart", there are extreme lows in there that other women do not even come close when singing this song Bb2. Extremely low tessitura. Toni even sing phrases down to A2, which makes her damn near female Tenor In pop any trained female singer should have the low F. Inexperienced Sopranos might have a harder time, because their typical lowest note that projects well is G3. The F is only one note below it, so it's not entirely out of reach. Essentially, everybody should easily sing in the Alto range in contemporary music.
@@arxsyn Hi, can you tell me about Britney Spears' range & what did she start out at as a 17 year old, and with age what would you say she is now, if her voice has changed? She had a pretty deep voice, wouldnt you say? Thank you, I appreciate any fyi's.... 🙏
Alexander Hamilton It depends on your age. If you’re anywhere between 11 and 15 ish, most voices are still pretty flexible and can sing all parts fine. Most singers ranges are not totally set in stone until as early as 19 all the way to mid 20’s. I’m in no way qualified to give this advice, other than the fact I’ve been in choir for a while, but I hope I’ve been helpful nonetheless 😁
Definitely deserve the title Doctor you do! Me singing teacher hear's the improvements in my voice because of your free tip's! Cheer's Dan. I think the key to me finding out my vocal classification, was realising how awful and forced my voice sounded while trying to sing like Elvis Presley back when I was starting me singing journey back around 2010. After year's of 'trying' to sound like a Baritone as well desiring to find out what on earth I truly was, my singing teacher freed up my voice and discovered I am in fact a Tenor, which i'm very pleased to be! Now instead of imitating Elvis, I can actually sing his song my way and give it a whole new texture and ring to it. Thank you for being a part of my vocal journey brother Dan! Merry Christmas, hope it's a groove!
Telegram Sam Please work to end apostrophe abuse. Every day, thousands of apostrophes are used inappropriately, and it doesn't need to happen. Thank you.
Ironically there are very less Baritone singers in Pop music. So it gets so saturating listening to all these high voices all the time. How do I find where my Fach is? whereas many legendary female singers are mezzo-sopranos. Whiney Houston for example. Even pop diva Beyonce is a mezzo, then there is Adele with her gorgeous Alto voice. why this discrepancy?
AJRA I think it’s harder to type voices, really. I sing best as an alto, but have the range of a mezzo soprano. It’s just a compartment to try to understand someone’s voice, but the knowledge is ever changing. All I know is when I sing I have gone as low as A2 and as high as F6, however I usually tend to be about C3-C6 normally. My easiest notes are about E3-G4 before I get into my mix voice. I have no clue what it would be. Everyone is “limited” to an extent
I was told i was alto when i went for choir audition, I’m surprised, my voice is quite medium high, i Guess I wasn’t so confident so i went lower so i can reach the higher notes
My voice dropped a year or two before most of my classmates did. I was always referred to as the “low bass” in choir, and it took me quite awhile to realize my voice sat in between bass and baritone. Individual voices and ranges fascinate me and I’m really curious to see where mine goes since I’ve only just turned 16. The energy and passion you bring to your videos engages me and makes me want to watch more.
I would like to know my voice type: my lowest chest voice is f2 and my highest chest is c5. My highest mixed voice is e5 My highest head voice is d#6 I can do whistle up to g7. Can someone tell my voice type?
A lot of people don't take in to consideration the adult status requirement for SATB to be accurate. So many kids in choir classes get confused and sometimes focus on the wrong end of their natural, yet still developing true voice type. When I was 14 I was probably tenor material, then right before I turned 15 I went total bass for my age. C♯2 can easily be considered baritone territory for an adult, but for someone my age it shifts down a notch. Our voices get deeper as we grow older, it's a simple fact; a lot of people don't realize that sometimes. In my opinion the best way to categorize young voices using SATB and its 7 part system would be to shift everything down one notch from the adult classification. Keep in mind this really only works if your voice matures at a steady pace, unlike mine. My friend was a total tenor until he hit 16, where over the course of just 2 months his lowest note dropped from F2 to B1. If that happens to you, it usually means you'll keep spiking downwards, and typically nullifies my method of classification because it means you're going to be a total bass. Hope this was helpful to some of the teen viewers :D
There is huge gap between the lowest note I can sing and my mid range, middle to high range I can transition to and from easily. The lowest note I can hit isn't strenuous but I guess that means its out of my vocal range. Save for if I want to hit just that one note and then return to the higher range.
3:12 "wear and tear" Question: Is damage to the vocal chords permanent? If not, what could one can do to undo some of the damage? Are there maybe different kinds of damage with some kinds being reversible and others not? I'm a little worried that my voice is already too damaged for me to ever be able to sing well.
Love this. Throughout my entire singing life, I have always been a Soprano (my choir instructor in school called us 1st Sopranos, 2nd was the mezzo). Pure and simple. My old vocal instructor loved my voice and really explored its abilities as a soprano, but also exposing me to various styles of music. He really helped me safely expand my range. I am so mad that I lost that! Even now, despite the rustiness and damage, I still sing higher notes with greater ease than lower. I can open more easily and relax more on the higher notes than I can lower ones. I love the feeling of singing Soprano...can't explain it exactly, but even as a child I was drawn to Sarah Brightman's Christine over and over again. She was the first influence on music I had as a singer, despite the variety of music in my house (rock, punk, metal, country, gospel/hymns around Christmas, musicals...) I remember getting the part of Sister Margarita in The Sound of Music high school play simply because I could hit those high notes. (main role always went to a senior, and usually the most popular one)
@TeamUSASportsFan that's what a person who knows better would classify it as. But in general it was a made up choir term that describes contraltos and low to middle mezzo sopranos. Both of which most of them have never heard of. Then you have the middle to higher mezzo's who teach some of the higher notes which get cake second sopranos. And most of them just think that means they are a soprano
@@jackskellington6sic6 there is such a thing in non-classical music. The distinction between alto and contralto is that contralto is basically a woman that has a dark timbre that sounds almost like a man and has a range similar to a tenor whereas alto is a woman whose range is not quite that of a mezzo, but whose timbre is right in between a mezzo and contralto.
I can also sing High Tenor. Because I can reach up very high with great consistency, I am often told I'm a natural Male Soprano. Vocal teachers I have consulted and trained with have said that I'm NOT a Tenor due to the fact my voice is super bright overall and I cannot sing too many low notes below G3 very well. They even say "Alto" is too low for me. Sadly, the really high notes are he strongest part of my voice.
Hey my range is E2-F5-F#6-G7 my highest chest voice is up to G4(chesty belt) and my highest mix voice is F5. I am confused if I am a baritone, a tenor or countertenor. I hope you'll help me.
Imma cry if I don't figure this out before I need to submit this damn application for this school Edit: hi guys... i got into the school i put soprano but im an alto 😂🤷🏽♀️❤️ oop
(In case you don't remember, you requested us to say something like this.) My general voice type I would say is a baritone. I do definitely feel my sweet spot is in the higher end of my voice as well. Even though this may not be the case for some mezzo-sopranos, I feel like that being the case makes it easier to sing AND made it easier to develop singing in a belting mixed voice A LOT! I'm 18 yo, which is probably why it's quite easy.
I can sing down to a A2 and comfortably up to A4, and C5 with my chest mix and E5 in full mix, at my school choir, they classified me as a tenor, then my music teacher told me im a baritone, then a voice teacher at a music school that I had my work immersion at told i could be a dramatic tenor, i dont even now, im confused
I think I’m a baritone and I kind of hate it because all the songs I love to sing are for altos or maybe a mezzo and I’m not meant to sing those type of songs
Hey this video was great, all of your videos are really cool, you make it all so much less stressful. I tested my range and can get from F2 up to C5, so I am thinking that makes me a baritone. I have ordered your CD and can't wait to start work on it, please keep making videos, they are sick.
I have to humbly disagree Dan. Vocal classification is very important. I was always dissatisfied with my singing. I imitated other female singers and damaged my voice. I had signs l have a lower voice, but l disregarded it, believing the Contralto voice to be rare as l had trouble accessing my cumbersome low register and l preferred singing in the high register mode. In the time that l injured my voice, on strict vocal rest, l felt something was changing within me. At the end of it, l was left with a very weak voice, but with some experimentation l was shocked at the sounds l was making. Extremely low, dark and smoky--androgynous, even. It was completely foreign to me. I was wondering if l was doing something wrong, scared to lose my voice again. I came to the conclusion that I'm not just any Alto (quasi Mezzo) but a true Contralto. I still wasn't sure though. So l had to educate myself about this rare voice and how it works, how it sounds, how other contraltos sing, the Contralto passagi and tessitura. This knowledge empowered me to sing again. I had to change everything l ever did. It was a huge, painful adjustment (like going through vocal puberty!), but l made more progress/improvement in 6 months than l ever had in 3 years. After re aligning my registers, like some miracle, l increased my range too. Singing lower and higher than l ever did before. A deep dive of various types of contraltos helped me. For instance, a dramatic contralto voice can sing the highest in pure chest register, Ab4. The standard Contralto passagio is F4, but apparently it is safe for many to delay using head voice at all up to G4. As well, most contraltos don't belt past D5 (in comparison Mezzo-sopranos belt up to E5). Neither does Bruno Mars, a high Tenor who can belt up to that range. Basically armed with all these facts in my head. I know l am not a dramatic voice that can chest voice up that high (potentially very damaging), but l can safely sing high tenor songs, but not imitate the high belts of other higher placed singers. These are safe parameters that my voice operates. Because l don't want to damage voice again, and it's a relief that l don't strain my voice for those high notes other females perform. That's ok. That's not my my thing. My thing is the prodigious powerful, thick chest voice that is often seen in the Contralto. I even have a G4 belt in me that is of similar quality to male singers. I enjoy singing now, having all the knowledge within myself. It's made me a better singer period. It's also a blessing to have such a voice, because l have always loved this voice and l admire men's voices a lot, and to be able to sing many of the keys they do, what can l say? It's awesome to be able to sing songs as they are written without having to transpose them.
My full range is from G2 to about A5- (give or take), but I often feel as though my voice has got two "sweet spots", depending on whether I'm singing in full voice or Falsetto. I've done several online tests, as well as sung with a singing-teacher, and as far as I could tell me sweet spots are from D3 to A4 in full voice and from B4 to about F5- (give or take), in Falsetto. However, my full-voiced and Falsetto ranges rarely- (if ever), come together. I normally sing either exclusively in full voice or exclusively in Falsetto, and very rarely do the twain meet! Unfortunately, I ain't much cop when it comes to constantly switching between me natural voice and me Falsetto voice, so songs like Marvin Gaye's 'Grapevine' would be an absolute no-no for me, 'cos there's too many transition notes, switches and vocal-breaks for me in songs like that. However, singing exclusively in Falsetto, I can sing songs such as 'Show Me Heaven' by Maria McKee with ease, in the original key, and in her register. How peculiar is that, eh? o.o
I actually have a bad habit of trying to match singer's tone and pitch. I know I'm toward the bass range but can hit higher vocal ranges without it straining me. So I can sing a wide range of songs, but feel more comfortable in the bass range.
I did your range-finding exercise from that other video and found my comfort zone to be about B2/C3-C4/D4, and then I can extend down to about A2 and up to about A4 before my voice starts to hurt. Where does that put me?
I have two areas where my voice feels most comfortable one in the higher end and one in the lower end. This has led me to be told things as different as I am a dramatic tenor and that I am a bass. I'm actually a baritone.
Question: How would you classify these voices: Linda Ronstadt’s, Garth Brook’s, Ed Sheeran’s, Halsey’s, and Patsy Cline’s? Especially since my voice has aged a bit, and especially when warmed up, I believe I’m pretty sure I can hit it all. Especially when I try to practice while holding my nose, dropping my diaphragm, and pretending that I truly mean what I’m saying to a specific person, AND I still sound like I’m singing normally but very fully (except for on M and N sounds.). Does that mean I just have wide range? Also, define falsetto, because if I start out on a larynx position of singing low and go up, it doesn’t feel the same as just singing soprano. (Like Barry Gibb for instance) In choir class in jr high school the teacher just put me in which ever group had the least amount of students. Or am I fooling myself?
I'm female, and my sweet spot seems to be F3 to F#4. Alto, right? My comfortable range is D3 to C6, but I've gotten as low as B2 and as high as F6. Personally, I much rather sing low than sing high, because a lot of songs for male vocalists make excursions to a low note. I'm glad D3 is comfortable because that one is particularly common in guitar-based music! Songs that go down to A2... bah. I can sing those songs an octave higher but the timbre is very different. I can transpose but it's nice when I don't have to. Plus I really enjoy singing D3, the sound and physical sensation of it. I do like to push the limits to see what I can do... but it definitely wouldn't work without using solid technique. Your videos and others have helped!
Dr Dan's Voice Essentials Thanks Dan, I'm actually very proud of my range as every note has come from hard work with correct and healthy technic. As previously stated on another of your videos I'm often referred to as Mrs when answering the phone as it was discovered at a recent visit to the Nose, Ears and Throat that I had vocal cords like a female! I did get bullied at school because I sounded like a girl! I learnt in college to accept my voice and embrace it as I researched what a countertenor was capable of. Great content as always Dan, new subscriber here, I love your approach 😀👍🏻
Dr Dan's Voice Essentials a guy which a higher ability in head is welcomed today and sadly when I was growing up was seen with suspicion! I was seen as a musical freak as lads in my college stopped at E5. I could quite easily put an octave on top of that! I was told to "fit in" so had to force an area of my voice (tenor) that I was comfortable in. I moved to another college and they embraced it and the rest is history!!
What do I do when Im 99% positive in a contralto because I can sing 1st Tenor and stuff but also I can sing 1st Soprano if a want to. Do I just have a large rang? What is it called! Or are all contraltos like this and I’m just going crazy??
ive done chorus and singing for a while, always been a baritone but now im doing alto and baritone. I can sing decently high, its just kind of like raspy i guess. like it isnt clear
My comfortable vocal range is a c4-c6, going up to G6 with some strain and down to a3 with strain. I’m comfortable singing in both my middle and head registers, but feel more confident and comfortable in my head voice and upper mixed. I’ve been classified by all performance choirs and teachers I’ve had as a soprano and I personally feel that’s what I am, but this is my first year with a new choir teacher and they put me in mezzo because “my voice is fuller”, although I think my voice is actually light, just not airy like the people they have assigned as sopranos. I haven’t been too uncomfortable with it, but recently it’s been difficult to sing the lower notes assigned to mezzos but my teacher refuses to move me. I’m beginning to wonder if I’m a soprano or mezzo, any insight?
Female, age 42 years. Range is C3 to G5, primarily in chest voice. Speaking voice is not high nor low. I'm going to guess Fach is mid-range. Would I be considered Alto? Contralto?
cool! now I know why I can belt 40s-70s music even though Im classified as a bass in our choir tho because of your vids and instructions Im gradually gaining range and becoming a baritone! This is very helpful thanks again Dr. Dan! :D
you talk about wear and tear from singing at a pitch higher than what your body is made for, is this wear-and-tear a temporary thing, or is it a permanent type of issue?
I 'think' I'm a Heldentenor, I have a high speaking voice for a chap, and a fairly high singing voice, but with a decent whack of power. The only problem is that I can go low - very low - with no loss of tone or form - so what am I?
My chest voice from F#2-D4 but i can user voice like woman voice to reach note from C#3-F5 but that not falsetto because my falsetto from G4-D6. Show what my vocal type??
Dr Dan. I have a doubt about the resonators for opera singers.I am a soprano and once I had a class in which I felt a high note resonating right between my eyebrows. It was beautiful, but unfortunately I couldn't feel it there anymore. I would like to know how to go about the famous "mask" and the resonators for opera singers. If possible. I thank in you in advance.
I have been classified as BASS. I really have a very low voice and I am indeed comfortable with it. Is it possible? I mean, I am a female after all. And when we sing, I sing with the males in the group. XD
On a good day I can hit middle C. At the other end I can, on a regular basis, hit 2 C's below middle C without much trouble; Like Geoff Calastini. Would that be classified as contrabass?
Hitting middle C and regularly reaching two C's below middle C is impressive! Your range does indeed suggest you have a significant lower register. While Geoff Castellini is known for his exceptional low notes, your ability might classify you as a contrabass. In vocal classification, a contrabass typically refers to a singer with an exceptionally low range. If you can consistently reach notes in the contrabass range (below the standard bass range), it's likely you could be classified as such.
Sir, I have a song only in soprano voice. I want to add the other three voices (alto, tenor and bass). Where can I send my song and get it composed the three other voices for me (using tonic sol-fa notation)? Can you get it done for me? Looking forward for your help and suggestions......pliz.
So I am thirteen. I can hit notes way below the bass cleff( I'm not sure of the exact pitch) but I can also hit notes in the tenor range, so I really don't know what I am.
I am female, and don't have a don't have a classification. I am not soprano, mezzo, or contralto. One voice teacher said I was the opposite of a tenorino (a natural countertenor), meaning I have a male range, sound and structure to my voice. My modal range, including strohbass, runs from about G 2 to about F 5. My most comfortable notes, where I sing like 90% of the time are G 3 to F 4. So I am best in mid-range, although I tend to prefer my head voice to my chest voice. If I were male, I would definitely be a tenor, likely a full lyric or spinto. But since I am female, I just call myself unclassifiable. By the way, good video! :)
I have a question. I watched your video on voice classification. My highest note is B5 and my lowest is A2. But my prima voice is E5 and F2. What is my classification?
How can I know the note for my alto and tenor.... For example I know that when my surprano is on doh, my tenor will be mi, and my alto will be Soh(In some case).... What if my surprano is on a note of Soh... What note will my alto and tenor part be.....
Akerele Gideon, the following video about finding your voice type may prove helpful - ua-cam.com/video/mNppbS_p5qA/v-deo.html&list=PLZFx6cLexy5ETvr0CFagdHTkrzS4Bn7nD
This is almost 3 years ago but i want to ask . Im 17 years old (male) vocal range in belt (E1-C6) my comfort stop at Bb5 . My falsetto , whistle kinda connected like i hit Bb5 in fv and go higher until i reach C7 in the same tune is fv can reach C7 !! . And how could i be soprano and hit that low my highest whistle was G7 but not singed it was like a lucky moment , i hit a Eb7 in singing my final q is (im going to lose my vocal range and how to keep it) and i can't use head voice at all just use it in mixed belt and heady voice but not soulful head voice my support i guess C5 but i supported a G5 like wow and it have resonance what i hate bout my voice my tune is pretty bad but im kinda pitch perfect , hit multi high notes like G#5X4 OR A5X3. So yeah wish anyone can answer .
@@KindaFeelsNice 😂😂😂😂 i don't say i could sing well but also this my real range . I just need a vocal coach to sound good n about the video i will share soon don't worry .
Chorus Teacher: Alto or Soprano?
Me (7th grade): I don’t know. Soprano, maybe?
Teacher: Ok, you’ll be a Soprano.
Kat Denning soooooo
How’d it go?
Whaaa same (me in 7th grade) :i joined choir and then i realized i can sing soprano, but i stopped going,
Maybe its 7 days straight and I don't know the techniques when singing so I'm singin in my throat and it made me dizzy so i stopped
But after a year passed and I'm in grade 8 i joined again but I'm not soprano, i can sing bass too sooo
I joined the bass
@@kazamigaming6869 😶
@@myaris.m?
i wanna be tony soprano
True basses are ultra rare... even more than tenors. :D I totally love bass voice.
I've heard it said that most so-called "Basses" are actually very low Baritones, as opposed to legit Basses.
That's really false, basses are not rare as people except, the bass range is between E2 and F#4, most basses are lyric basses, but they are not ultra-rare, and they are not "very low baritone" they are not the most common voice type with varies between countries, in italia, the most common male voice is tenor for instance. Teh other type of what people consider the bass voice is the basso profundo voice witch usually sing between D2 and F4 (sometimes C2) but it's just the less common bass voice type, so stop saying bullshit about bass voice and baritone voice (baritone is a quite high voice type)
I didn't say all Basses, I said most blokes who consider themselves to be "Basses" will probably be shocked to find that their true voices actually lie somewhere towards the lower end of the Baritone range, and not in the Bass range, as they once assumed. We've got a "Bass" section in the choir what I'm part of, but I can tell ya now that only one of the blokes in that particular section's a true Bass. The rest are low Baris, who are trying to sing in the Bass register. I'm saying that sometimes, a particular piece of music calls for a singer to transgress their legit vocal-range. I know a fellow Bari when I hear one, being a Bari, meself- (even though I'm at the higher end of the Baritone range!) We've also got Mezzo-sopranos in our choir who have to blag it as either a Soprano or an Alto, 'cos we've got no Mezzo section. We've also got no Bari section either, so the Baritones among us have to blag it as either a Tenor or a Bass, even though that ain't our legit tessitura. Maybe you misunderstood what I was saying, maybe I didn't make what I was saying clear enough, or maybe, I'm just coming from a choir point-of-view, as opposed to a soloist's point-of-view. That said, most of our so-called "Basses" are low Baris, so I weren't talking shit at all, thank you! Peace and love.
Son Goku I'm double bass baritone soprano I'm one of the 3 people that are double bass baritone soprano :DDDD
but there are many "tenors" but real tenors that arrive at hight notes, not all.
Dr. Dan: “misclasification is a problem when singers insist on singing outside their range”
Me, a “lady tenor”: I wanna sing soprano and you can’t stop me.
same brooooo
Me an alto, Immma sing TENOR!!
im the opposite all i really want to do is sing low but my soprano voice said you can sing a G3and no lower
@@benjaminlawrence1779 lol. Still finding my way. Apparently, I usually accidentally sign a girl's tenor? Suprano. No problem with my bass at all.
you do be calling me out also
3:15 I'd rather say most female pop songs are written for the Alto range. They rarely go above a D#5 or E5 and if, it's usually strongly belted. And they also go really low, like to a G3 or F3. Male pop songs are mostly written in tenor range and the singers use falsetto often, so when men and women sing in a duet they often even sing in the same range.
There is no Alto. They are either a mezzo soprano or a contralto
Jack42
Hence why Zayne Malik sung higher than Taylor Swift in “I don’t wanna live forever”
Jack42 lol you forgot bout Mariah Carey 😂😂
You are correct, pop songs are written for a generic "Alto" (low female range). The typical lowest note is F3, very rarely E3 (low mezzo soprano note). Just so you know a real Contralto voice easily goes down to D3 and many go lower, as Toni Braxton does in "Unbreak My Heart", there are extreme lows in there that other women do not even come close when singing this song Bb2. Extremely low tessitura. Toni even sing phrases down to A2, which makes her damn near female Tenor
In pop any trained female singer should have the low F. Inexperienced Sopranos might have a harder time, because their typical lowest note that projects well is G3. The F is only one note below it, so it's not entirely out of reach. Essentially, everybody should easily sing in the Alto range in contemporary music.
@@arxsyn Hi, can you tell me about Britney Spears' range & what did she start out at as a 17 year old, and with age what would you say she is now, if her voice has changed? She had a pretty deep voice, wouldnt you say?
Thank you, I appreciate any fyi's.... 🙏
In my school choir, I can sing soprano I, soprano II, and alto all pretty comfortably. What would that make me?
Alexander Hamilton It depends on your age. If you’re anywhere between 11 and 15 ish, most voices are still pretty flexible and can sing all parts fine. Most singers ranges are not totally set in stone until as early as 19 all the way to mid 20’s. I’m in no way qualified to give this advice, other than the fact I’ve been in choir for a while, but I hope I’ve been helpful nonetheless 😁
Is this rhett
Eva P! My choir director says I’m a bass yet I can sing tenor, but I can go as low as a c2 with a tiny bit of fry, I’m a 13 yr old boy
Mezzo maybe
Alexander Hamilton The Treasury Secretary
Very informative. Watching this I'm going to say I am a tenor but my fach is in the lower range. Not sure though. I'll have to go fach myself.
(Forgive me).
John Andert so you’re a lyrical tenor
😂😂😂😂😂
John Andert same here only I’m more in the middle
So I'ma a girl/ boy thing and can sing lower than bass
SATB sounds like something you get after a one night stand
billy 😂😂
Sexually acquired tuberculosis
You're the first voice teacher i've heard who's saying "Fach" right! 😄
Definitely deserve the title Doctor you do! Me singing teacher hear's the improvements in my voice because of your free tip's! Cheer's Dan.
I think the key to me finding out my vocal classification, was realising how awful and forced my voice sounded while trying to sing like Elvis Presley back when I was starting me singing journey back around 2010. After year's of 'trying' to sound like a Baritone as well desiring to find out what on earth I truly was, my singing teacher freed up my voice and discovered I am in fact a Tenor, which i'm very pleased to be!
Now instead of imitating Elvis, I can actually sing his song my way and give it a whole new texture and ring to it.
Thank you for being a part of my vocal journey brother Dan! Merry Christmas, hope it's a groove!
Telegram Sam Please work to end apostrophe abuse. Every day, thousands of apostrophes are used inappropriately, and it doesn't need to happen.
Thank you.
Ironically there are very less Baritone singers in Pop music. So it gets so saturating listening to all these high voices all the time. How do I find where my Fach is? whereas many legendary female singers are mezzo-sopranos. Whiney Houston for example. Even pop diva Beyonce is a mezzo, then there is Adele with her gorgeous Alto voice. why this discrepancy?
Arunava Sadhukhan I’ve actually read that Adele is a Dark Soprano meaning she has a heavy tone to her voice but she can reach higher than an Alto
AJRA I think it’s harder to type voices, really. I sing best as an alto, but have the range of a mezzo soprano. It’s just a compartment to try to understand someone’s voice, but the knowledge is ever changing. All I know is when I sing I have gone as low as A2 and as high as F6, however I usually tend to be about C3-C6 normally. My easiest notes are about E3-G4 before I get into my mix voice. I have no clue what it would be. Everyone is “limited” to an extent
Few. Very few.
Thank god for Michael Buble. He's the only popular singer today that I can sing along with. lol
@@DFPSprite She is a mezzo
Analyzed Freddie Mercury's voice.
Yezzzzz
I've got a voice like Freddy's voice!
@@sethflix now record yourself, listen it and fall in embarrassment like me
@@EnDeRBeaT lol
I was told i was alto when i went for choir audition, I’m surprised, my voice is quite medium high, i Guess I wasn’t so confident so i went lower so i can reach the higher notes
My voice dropped a year or two before most of my classmates did. I was always referred to as the “low bass” in choir, and it took me quite awhile to realize my voice sat in between bass and baritone. Individual voices and ranges fascinate me and I’m really curious to see where mine goes since I’ve only just turned 16. The energy and passion you bring to your videos engages me and makes me want to watch more.
bro is 20 now omd
@@itsnot_cruz You are right sir. I'm singing in college now. Fun stuff.
I would like to know my voice type: my lowest chest voice is f2 and my highest chest is c5.
My highest mixed voice is e5
My highest head voice is d#6
I can do whistle up to g7.
Can someone tell my voice type?
nuno silva, the following video about voice types may prove helpful - ua-cam.com/video/mNppbS_p5qA/v-deo.html
A lot of people don't take in to consideration the adult status requirement for SATB to be accurate. So many kids in choir classes get confused and sometimes focus on the wrong end of their natural, yet still developing true voice type. When I was 14 I was probably tenor material, then right before I turned 15 I went total bass for my age. C♯2 can easily be considered baritone territory for an adult, but for someone my age it shifts down a notch. Our voices get deeper as we grow older, it's a simple fact; a lot of people don't realize that sometimes. In my opinion the best way to categorize young voices using SATB and its 7 part system would be to shift everything down one notch from the adult classification. Keep in mind this really only works if your voice matures at a steady pace, unlike mine. My friend was a total tenor until he hit 16, where over the course of just 2 months his lowest note dropped from F2 to B1. If that happens to you, it usually means you'll keep spiking downwards, and typically nullifies my method of classification because it means you're going to be a total bass.
Hope this was helpful to some of the teen viewers :D
Additionally, the following video may prove helpful to younger viewers also - ua-cam.com/video/fV-0EEiPZhs/v-deo.html
I have been told that I have a really good bass voice....I once had a choir teacher stalk me when I was 13
jeez was he phantom or something
There is huge gap between the lowest note I can sing and my mid range, middle to high range I can transition to and from easily. The lowest note I can hit isn't strenuous but I guess that means its out of my vocal range. Save for if I want to hit just that one note and then return to the higher range.
3:12 "wear and tear"
Question: Is damage to the vocal chords permanent? If not, what could one can do to undo some of the damage? Are there maybe different kinds of damage with some kinds being reversible and others not?
I'm a little worried that my voice is already too damaged for me to ever be able to sing well.
No, many types of vocal damage are not permanent...but may take some time to heal with proper intervention/therapy.
The sound you used at the beginning is my alarm and I am deeply upset.
Love this. Throughout my entire singing life, I have always been a Soprano (my choir instructor in school called us 1st Sopranos, 2nd was the mezzo). Pure and simple. My old vocal instructor loved my voice and really explored its abilities as a soprano, but also exposing me to various styles of music. He really helped me safely expand my range. I am so mad that I lost that!
Even now, despite the rustiness and damage, I still sing higher notes with greater ease than lower. I can open more easily and relax more on the higher notes than I can lower ones. I love the feeling of singing Soprano...can't explain it exactly, but even as a child I was drawn to Sarah Brightman's Christine over and over again. She was the first influence on music I had as a singer, despite the variety of music in my house (rock, punk, metal, country, gospel/hymns around Christmas, musicals...) I remember getting the part of Sister Margarita in The Sound of Music high school play simply because I could hit those high notes. (main role always went to a senior, and usually the most popular one)
Loving your reflections on my videos, Michelle!
@@DrDanRobinson Thank you! I am trying to keep them minimal until I am out of the backlog, but some I just can't help but respond to. ^_^
2nd is still soprano. The Altos are what we would consider Mezzo Soprano.
Alto and proud of it (but also eager to expand my voice range). I sing in my university choir.
alto is an amazing voice.
There is no such thing. Are you a mezzo soprano or a contralto
@TeamUSASportsFan that's what a person who knows better would classify it as. But in general it was a made up choir term that describes contraltos and low to middle mezzo sopranos. Both of which most of them have never heard of. Then you have the middle to higher mezzo's who teach some of the higher notes which get cake second sopranos. And most of them just think that means they are a soprano
@TeamUSASportsFan that just makes things evert more complicated. Yikes
@@jackskellington6sic6 there is such a thing in non-classical music. The distinction between alto and contralto is that contralto is basically a woman that has a dark timbre that sounds almost like a man and has a range similar to a tenor whereas alto is a woman whose range is not quite that of a mezzo, but whose timbre is right in between a mezzo and contralto.
My partner is a Baritone, and I'm a whatever the hell the range from F3 to A5 is.
But then again, mine is without training whatsoever.
Snow Hawkins soprano I think
I’M F3 TO A4 WE’RE ALMOST THE SAME LOL
sick im G3 to A5
@@samanthaclay9540 me too!(E3→E5)
Is it an Alto voice?
Maya Hussain yes haha!
Man, do I feel glad that you mentioned Countertenor because that is what I am.
I can also sing High Tenor. Because I can reach up very high with great consistency, I am often told I'm a natural Male Soprano. Vocal teachers I have consulted and trained with have said that I'm NOT a Tenor due to the fact my voice is super bright overall and I cannot sing too many low notes below G3 very well. They even say "Alto" is too low for me. Sadly, the really high notes are he strongest part of my voice.
am tenor and love the bass singers idk if i can ever do that hhh but i can enjoy their singing every time
But what if there is no choir or singing teacher in the school?
Hey my range is E2-F5-F#6-G7 my highest chest voice is up to G4(chesty belt) and my highest mix voice is F5. I am confused if I am a baritone, a tenor or countertenor. I hope you'll help me.
Dr Dan is a marvellous communicator.
Imma cry if I don't figure this out before I need to submit this damn application for this school
Edit: hi guys... i got into the school i put soprano but im an alto 😂🤷🏽♀️❤️ oop
Is it going well now😂?
Omg😂did you clarify the mistake or you're singing as a soprano now?
I have a feeling I’d be an alto if I sang but I wouldn’t know
(In case you don't remember, you requested us to say something like this.) My general voice type I would say is a baritone. I do definitely feel my sweet spot is in the higher end of my voice as well. Even though this may not be the case for some mezzo-sopranos, I feel like that being the case makes it easier to sing AND made it easier to develop singing in a belting mixed voice A LOT! I'm 18 yo, which is probably why it's quite easy.
I can sing down to a A2 and comfortably up to A4, and C5 with my chest mix and E5 in full mix, at my school choir, they classified me as a tenor, then my music teacher told me im a baritone, then a voice teacher at a music school that I had my work immersion at told i could be a dramatic tenor, i dont even now, im confused
I’m not sure because I have the E3 as the contralto and the C6 as the soprano
I was a male soprano in my 20's. Now I'd say I am high alto/mezzo now.
I think I’m a baritone and I kind of hate it because all the songs I love to sing are for altos or maybe a mezzo and I’m not meant to sing those type of songs
Hey this video was great, all of your videos are really cool, you make it all so much less stressful. I tested my range and can get from F2 up to C5, so I am thinking that makes me a baritone. I have ordered your CD and can't wait to start work on it, please keep making videos, they are sick.
Thanks, Chris...I hope you enjoy using the exercise CD. Welcome to the Voice Essentials community!
I have to humbly disagree Dan. Vocal classification is very important. I was always dissatisfied with my singing. I imitated other female singers and damaged my voice. I had signs l have a lower voice, but l disregarded it, believing the Contralto voice to be rare as l had trouble accessing my cumbersome low register and l preferred singing in the high register mode.
In the time that l injured my voice, on strict vocal rest, l felt something was changing within me. At the end of it, l was left with a very weak voice, but with some experimentation l was shocked at the sounds l was making. Extremely low, dark and smoky--androgynous, even. It was completely foreign to me. I was wondering if l was doing something wrong, scared to lose my voice again. I came to the conclusion that I'm not just any Alto (quasi Mezzo) but a true Contralto. I still wasn't sure though. So l had to educate myself about this rare voice and how it works, how it sounds, how other contraltos sing, the Contralto passagi and tessitura. This knowledge empowered me to sing again. I had to change everything l ever did. It was a huge, painful adjustment (like going through vocal puberty!), but l made more progress/improvement in 6 months than l ever had in 3 years. After re aligning my registers, like some miracle, l increased my range too. Singing lower and higher than l ever did before.
A deep dive of various types of contraltos helped me. For instance, a dramatic contralto voice can sing the highest in pure chest register, Ab4. The standard Contralto passagio is F4, but apparently it is safe for many to delay using head voice at all up to G4. As well, most contraltos don't belt past D5 (in comparison Mezzo-sopranos belt up to E5). Neither does Bruno Mars, a high Tenor who can belt up to that range. Basically armed with all these facts in my head. I know l am not a dramatic voice that can chest voice up that high (potentially very damaging), but l can safely sing high tenor songs, but not imitate the high belts of other higher placed singers. These are safe parameters that my voice operates. Because l don't want to damage voice again, and it's a relief that l don't strain my voice for those high notes other females perform. That's ok. That's not my my thing. My thing is the prodigious powerful, thick chest voice that is often seen in the Contralto. I even have a G4 belt in me that is of similar quality to male singers. I enjoy singing now, having all the knowledge within myself. It's made me a better singer period.
It's also a blessing to have such a voice, because l have always loved this voice and l admire men's voices a lot, and to be able to sing many of the keys they do, what can l say? It's awesome to be able to sing songs as they are written without having to transpose them.
My full range is from G2 to about A5- (give or take), but I often feel as though my voice has got two "sweet spots", depending on whether I'm singing in full voice or Falsetto. I've done several online tests, as well as sung with a singing-teacher, and as far as I could tell me sweet spots are from D3 to A4 in full voice and from B4 to about F5- (give or take), in Falsetto. However, my full-voiced and Falsetto ranges rarely- (if ever), come together. I normally sing either exclusively in full voice or exclusively in Falsetto, and very rarely do the twain meet! Unfortunately, I ain't much cop when it comes to constantly switching between me natural voice and me Falsetto voice, so songs like Marvin Gaye's 'Grapevine' would be an absolute no-no for me, 'cos there's too many transition notes, switches and vocal-breaks for me in songs like that. However, singing exclusively in Falsetto, I can sing songs such as 'Show Me Heaven' by Maria McKee with ease, in the original key, and in her register. How peculiar is that, eh? o.o
Hewooo
You said anatomy can't change. My voice has deepened significantly with aging & menopause.
I actually have a bad habit of trying to match singer's tone and pitch. I know I'm toward the bass range but can hit higher vocal ranges without it straining me. So I can sing a wide range of songs, but feel more comfortable in the bass range.
I did your range-finding exercise from that other video and found my comfort zone to be about B2/C3-C4/D4, and then I can extend down to about A2 and up to about A4 before my voice starts to hurt. Where does that put me?
Thomas, that suggests a high Baritone voice.
I have two areas where my voice feels most comfortable one in the higher end and one in the lower end. This has led me to be told things as different as I am a dramatic tenor and that I am a bass. I'm actually a baritone.
Yes, Mike. It certainly does sound like you are a Baritone.
I am not an adult and I tried choir and didn't get in but still want to try and work on my voice so how do I figure it out?
Super clear, engaging and helpful for this amateur aspiring singer, thank you!
I'm glad you enjoyed the video La Maison Sacre. Thanks for watching.
Question: How would you classify these voices:
Linda Ronstadt’s, Garth Brook’s, Ed Sheeran’s, Halsey’s, and Patsy Cline’s?
Especially since my voice has aged a bit, and especially when warmed up, I believe I’m pretty sure I can hit it all. Especially when I try to practice while holding my nose, dropping my diaphragm, and pretending that I truly mean what I’m saying to a specific person, AND I still sound like I’m singing normally but very fully (except for on M and N sounds.).
Does that mean I just have wide range? Also, define falsetto, because if I start out on a larynx position of singing low and go up, it doesn’t feel the same as just singing soprano. (Like Barry Gibb for instance)
In choir class in jr high school the teacher just put me in which ever group had the least amount of students.
Or am I fooling myself?
F2 to A#5. I'm a leggiero tenor as well!! Sweet spot for me is from G3 to D5
Madhan Bhavani me too my range is A#2 to A#5
My range may extend from A2 to A#4 or even B4 before I switch to falsetto...
It is SO hard to find songs that fit my voice well. I found most songs by EDEN at good for it though.
Yea what if your lowest chest voice is way lower than the piano and can mix higher than most tenors?
I'm female, and my sweet spot seems to be F3 to F#4. Alto, right?
My comfortable range is D3 to C6, but I've gotten as low as B2 and as high as F6. Personally, I much rather sing low than sing high, because a lot of songs for male vocalists make excursions to a low note. I'm glad D3 is comfortable because that one is particularly common in guitar-based music! Songs that go down to A2... bah. I can sing those songs an octave higher but the timbre is very different. I can transpose but it's nice when I don't have to. Plus I really enjoy singing D3, the sound and physical sensation of it.
I do like to push the limits to see what I can do... but it definitely wouldn't work without using solid technique. Your videos and others have helped!
Counter-Tenor/Male Light-Soprano here Dan (G3-A6)
Dr Dan's Voice Essentials Thanks Dan, I'm actually very proud of my range as every note has come from hard work with correct and healthy technic. As previously stated on another of your videos I'm often referred to as Mrs when answering the phone as it was discovered at a recent visit to the Nose, Ears and Throat that I had vocal cords like a female! I did get bullied at school because I sounded like a girl! I learnt in college to accept my voice and embrace it as I researched what a countertenor was capable of. Great content as always Dan, new subscriber here, I love your approach 😀👍🏻
Dr Dan's Voice Essentials a guy which a higher ability in head is welcomed today and sadly when I was growing up was seen with suspicion! I was seen as a musical freak as lads in my college stopped at E5. I could quite easily put an octave on top of that! I was told to "fit in" so had to force an area of my voice (tenor) that I was comfortable in. I moved to another college and they embraced it and the rest is history!!
Nat Elliott-Ross Jealous Man I like to know how to gain control in the 6th Octave and have full air support while singing up there.
To be honest, my highest note was a B7. However, I need training for my whistle register.
@@TenorReacts same in regards to the voice type, but I lack the upper part from D6 on.
I’m a girl and I’m a Alto but everyone acts like they hate Altos and it makes me feel like I shouldn’t sing anymore.
I never know the term and always refer it to "male range" and "female range".
Kuro DCupu, the following video about finding your voice type may prove helpful - ua-cam.com/video/919W3LRkL_A/v-deo.html
So I'm a baritone i can't hit the higher note for tenor or the lower notes for bass but in my school it's just Sopranos alto tenor and bass
What do I do when Im 99% positive in a contralto because I can sing 1st Tenor and stuff but also I can sing 1st Soprano if a want to. Do I just have a large rang? What is it called! Or are all contraltos like this and I’m just going crazy??
I like low but when I actually hear my voice on tape it sounds higher than I think it should
ive done chorus and singing for a while, always been a baritone but now im doing alto and baritone. I can sing decently high, its just kind of like raspy i guess. like it isnt clear
My comfortable vocal range is a c4-c6, going up to G6 with some strain and down to a3 with strain. I’m comfortable singing in both my middle and head registers, but feel more confident and comfortable in my head voice and upper mixed. I’ve been classified by all performance choirs and teachers I’ve had as a soprano and I personally feel that’s what I am, but this is my first year with a new choir teacher and they put me in mezzo because “my voice is fuller”, although I think my voice is actually light, just not airy like the people they have assigned as sopranos. I haven’t been too uncomfortable with it, but recently it’s been difficult to sing the lower notes assigned to mezzos but my teacher refuses to move me. I’m beginning to wonder if I’m a soprano or mezzo, any insight?
BeautyAndTheBooks, the following NEW video about vocal range may prove helpful - ua-cam.com/video/mNppbS_p5qA/v-deo.html
C6?Without falsetto?
Can you upload a video of you hitting C6?
It sounds too fake no offense
Female, age 42 years. Range is C3 to G5, primarily in chest voice. Speaking voice is not high nor low. I'm going to guess Fach is mid-range. Would I be considered Alto? Contralto?
Kathleen G., the following video may prove helpful - ua-cam.com/video/mNppbS_p5qA/v-deo.html
cool! now I know why I can belt 40s-70s music even though Im classified as a bass in our choir tho because of your vids and instructions Im gradually gaining range and becoming a baritone! This is very helpful thanks again Dr. Dan! :D
What if my belts are very low but i can hit all falsettos (up to F#6 with ease) and whistles up to F#7
What if you're a girl and can reach extremely high notes and low notes. I can reach low notes but it hurts after a while
My vocal range goes from (C2) fry < (E2-G2) fry mix < A2 sweet spot A4 > mixin up to D#5 > up to (D6) falsetto
What would you say am i? Baritone or tenor? And a question, if i upload a cover could you watch it? :)
the problem is I want to know what voice Jon Anderson has, and many call it an alto-tenor voice.
I JUST CAME FOR A SIMPLE DIFFERENCE!
you talk about wear and tear from singing at a pitch higher than what your body is made for, is this wear-and-tear a temporary thing, or is it a permanent type of issue?
It generally will be a temporary thing...but if you persist it can cause serious issues for the long-term health of your voice.
@@DrDanRobinson okay i see, thanks for the information!
I 'think' I'm a Heldentenor, I have a high speaking voice for a chap, and a fairly high singing voice, but with a decent whack of power. The only problem is that I can go low - very low - with no loss of tone or form - so what am I?
I can sing from a C3 to a G5. Where would that put me?
Thank you so much doctor ! I have learned a lot.
I'm glad you enjoyed the video LVM Levure-musicale MBOURANGON Déo G. 欧阳颂. Thanks for watching.
My chest voice from F#2-D4 but i can user voice like woman voice to reach note from C#3-F5 but that not falsetto because my falsetto from G4-D6. Show what my vocal type??
What about the contralto🤔
Maybe up to Eb5? Or E5?🤔
Dr Dan. I have a doubt about the resonators for opera singers.I am a soprano and once I had a class in which I felt a high note resonating right between my eyebrows. It was beautiful, but unfortunately I couldn't feel it there anymore. I would like to know how to go about the famous "mask" and the resonators for opera singers. If possible. I thank in you in advance.
Rosario, the following video discusses 'singing in the mask' - ua-cam.com/video/lTEVyAmN_M4/v-deo.html
I am a tenor, and my sweet spot is at the higher end of my range.
I have been classified as BASS. I really have a very low voice and I am indeed comfortable with it. Is it possible? I mean, I am a female after all. And when we sing, I sing with the males in the group. XD
Why choose? I sing as a bass and mezzo-soprano as a countertenor.
What is the difference between alto and contraalto voice ?
I'm a baritone, I can hit a tiny bit passed bass though.
I love the baritone voices and developed mezzo soprano voices.
Great video!❤❤❤❤❤
On a good day I can hit middle C. At the other end I can, on a regular basis, hit 2 C's below middle C without much trouble; Like Geoff Calastini. Would that be classified as contrabass?
Hitting middle C and regularly reaching two C's below middle C is impressive! Your range does indeed suggest you have a significant lower register. While Geoff Castellini is known for his exceptional low notes, your ability might classify you as a contrabass.
In vocal classification, a contrabass typically refers to a singer with an exceptionally low range. If you can consistently reach notes in the contrabass range (below the standard bass range), it's likely you could be classified as such.
I'm a counter tenor, my range stretches from D3 to G flat 6
I'm a tenor but i'm trying to upgrade my vocal range to counter tenor.
@@John-od8zv Yes im trying to reach higher notes while being stable and practice my breathing.
I sing most comfortably from around E2-G3 (I can sing higher and lower, but that's the "sweet spot"), where would that place my voice type?
When I was a child I have a soprano voice
When when I reach puberty stage my voice getting lower and turn into baritone.
Genmark Caimor, the following video may prove helpful - ua-cam.com/video/fV-0EEiPZhs/v-deo.html
Sir, I have a song only in soprano voice. I want to add the other three voices (alto, tenor and bass). Where can I send my song and get it composed the three other voices for me (using tonic sol-fa notation)? Can you get it done for me? Looking forward for your help and suggestions......pliz.
My tessitura is C3-E5. the lowest note I can hit is B2. My highest note is A5. Am I an alto?
Can We heard all this different classifications talk???
Pucha no puedo verlo por que no esta en español
My first thought was "This guy could sing Rush really well"
Currently My lowest note is G#2
And highest note is F#5
Which type i fit in
Could someone plz guide me?
So I am thirteen. I can hit notes way below the bass cleff( I'm not sure of the exact pitch) but I can also hit notes in the tenor range, so I really don't know what I am.
My voice just drops lower and lower. I'm a little sad though because I love my bass range, but I also love my tenor range.
Very easy to follow your ideas! Thank you very much bro, greetings from argentina
Glad you like them!
By vocal range is A1 to Bb5. I sing bass and high. What am I? I also sing higher when I hit falsetto. It stops up to G6
Mike, I'm releasing a new video about voice types next week. Stay tuned!
Here's the link to my NEW video about voice classification - ua-cam.com/video/mNppbS_p5qA/v-deo.html
my lowest is around G2 but a bit breathy
highest chest is around A4
my highest note is A#5-B5
what type of voice am i?im 17 y old male
My range is kinda like yours. My lowest: F2. The Highest: A5/B5 So I am a tenor😆😆😆
Same here. I have notes above and below that but I seldom sing there.
You’re a Baritone with Mixed Voice. Or a Tenor, it depends on your tone not your vocal range
I am fifteen. My vocal range is C2 - D4 but I can sing a good A4 with head voice. Am I a baritone? Will I be a bass?
Always great information Dr Dan. Thank you.
i can hit very high notes like g7 i can go down to f2 but i dont have a good singing voice
I am female, and don't have a don't have a classification. I am not soprano, mezzo, or contralto. One voice teacher said I was the opposite of a tenorino (a natural countertenor), meaning I have a male range, sound and structure to my voice. My modal range, including strohbass, runs from about G 2 to about F 5. My most comfortable notes, where I sing like 90% of the time are G 3 to F 4. So I am best in mid-range, although I tend to prefer my head voice to my chest voice. If I were male, I would definitely be a tenor, likely a full lyric or spinto. But since I am female, I just call myself unclassifiable. By the way, good video! :)
I don't my voice could you please help me find it
I have a question. I watched your video on voice classification. My highest note is B5 and my lowest is A2. But my prima voice is E5 and F2. What is my classification?
How can I know the note for my alto and tenor.... For example I know that when my surprano is on doh, my tenor will be mi, and my alto will be Soh(In some case).... What if my surprano is on a note of Soh... What note will my alto and tenor part be.....
Akerele Gideon, the following video about finding your voice type may prove helpful - ua-cam.com/video/mNppbS_p5qA/v-deo.html&list=PLZFx6cLexy5ETvr0CFagdHTkrzS4Bn7nD
This is almost 3 years ago but i want to ask
.
Im 17 years old (male) vocal range in belt (E1-C6) my comfort stop at Bb5
.
My falsetto , whistle kinda connected like i hit Bb5 in fv and go higher until i reach C7 in the same tune is fv can reach C7 !!
.
And how could i be soprano and hit that low my highest whistle was G7 but not singed it was like a lucky moment , i hit a Eb7 in singing my final q is
(im going to lose my vocal range and how to keep it) and i can't use head voice at all just use it in mixed belt and heady voice but not soulful head voice my support i guess C5 but i supported a G5 like wow and it have resonance what i hate bout my voice my tune is pretty bad but im kinda pitch perfect , hit multi high notes like G#5X4 OR A5X3. So yeah wish anyone can answer .
This NEW video will help you to find your vocal classification - ua-cam.com/video/mNppbS_p5qA/v-deo.html
What?
@@justinsaehoon what. what ?
You are probably some cringy kid at school who thinks he can sing well...
E1-C6-C7...pff get a like boi
Or upload a video on UA-cam for proof
@@KindaFeelsNice 😂😂😂😂 i don't say i could sing well but also this my real range . I just need a vocal coach to sound good n about the video i will share soon don't worry .
Isn’t there a way to increase your vocal range? I think it takes time and proper vocal training, but isn’t it possible?
Chest Voice G2 - D4
Falsetto A3 - F4
Head Voice ?? - C5