her lowest notes are lower than most natural altos have access to! a lot of singers that have a great high register don’t bother to develop such a strong base in the lows. you can tell she spends a lot of time working on expanding her range and being as versatile as possible, one of the most admiral traits she has a singer :)
@@carlossimancas7109 I would say she’s a bright mezzo, she’s a lot more comfortable in her lower range and the only reason shes able to belt so high all of the time is due to good technique and mostly using mixed voice and masked head voice instead of a balanced belty sound as of now at least. Kinda like Meghan Trainer who also uses a bright heady mix despite her natural chest voice being that of a mezzo.
@@knaxor comfortable in low doesnt mean you are Mezzo her lows are airy and weak also her vocal weight doesnt match Mezzo weight she have light/bright voice and high tessitura
this is so interesting but can someone explain this in like width of piano keys? i have no musical background and the letters in the title mean nothing to me
I’ll try to explain! Do you have a piano? That would definitely make it easier to understand/visualize. Otherwise you can try finding a picture or an interactive version on Google :) Most pianos have 88 keys. On a piano like that, it’s actually pretty straightforward, because C1 is the first/deepest C, on the left side, and C8 is the last/highest C, all the way to the right. Maybe you’ve heard of middle C? That one’s C4. I don’t know if you just meant ‘numbers’ when you wrote ‘letters’, or if you don’t know what the letters mean either - I’ll give a quick explanation of the letters too, just in case! If you already know this, feel free to skip it 👌 An octave spans 13 keys. Every key represents half a note - a full note is two keys up/down from the starting one. The letters without any symbols after are the white keys (like C, D etc.). The ones with symbols after the letters are the black keys (C#, Eb etc.). Each of the black keys have two different names, which can mostly be used interchangeably. The symbols tell you whether they’re half a note HIGHER (#) or LOWER (b) from the key of the letter. So the note between C and D, for instance, can be called both C# and Db. Only exceptions (no pun intended) here are that E# and Fb usually aren’t used, because there is only half a note between E and F, so it makes more sense to just use those - same with B and C, you wouldn’t call it B# when you can just call it C. This explanation ended up dragging on for a bit, hope you don’t mind! So, an octave consists of these keys/letters: C, C#/Db, D, D#/Eb, E, F, F#/Gb, G, G#/Ab, A, A#/Bb, B and then the C an octave above the first one. When you say eg. that someone has 3 octaves of vocal range, you count the last note as part of that, but when writing down notes like in this video, the octaves/numbers change at every C, so that next C is the start of a new octave, not the last note of the octave before. So the last few notes before middle C, for instance, are A3, Bb3 and B3 - and then once you hit the C, a new octave begins and it goes C4, C#4, D4 and so on, until you reach C5 and the next octave begins. Again, on a standard piano the lowest C is C1, but there are a couple notes even lower than that, the very lowest is A0 (on the piano, that is). C8 is the very highest note on the piano. But - as far as I know, at least - there ARE higher and lower notes than that, but they would be VERY difficult to sing. Still, I would guess a tea kettle or something like that would be able to make a sound higher than C8 😅 And of course, at some point there are notes which the human ear can’t physically hear, but I don’t know exactly when that happens (probably also depends on age and other factors). Hope my explanation was understandable, please write if there’s anything else you’re wondering about! I’m a musician and a singer, so I could talk about this stuff for days haha.
@@firethroughtheskies2648 her belt is too thin as she ascend her natural light lyric soprano timbre comes out and so is her head voice lacking volume output weight and is super underdeveloped
@@ri260 well I would say that has to do with her approach and style so she stay relevant in pop blah blah. Her mid range is initially what make me think she's a full lyric soprano. She doesn't adducted her vocal cord the same as she ascend, if she did she would same the same up there. Also, do you know park hyo shin? Would you say full lyric or light lyric tenor with dramatic approach?
@@firethroughtheskies2648 those not natural volume output and weight she overpushed and depressed her larynx a lot to sing rough pop punk style belt her voice is girly naturally
@@ri260 yeah whether light lyric or full lyric, she's not big sized soprano that's for sure. Full lyric soprano is quite girly voice sometimes tho. I don't think her voice is as high and bright like light lyric soprano tho (as someone who play pitch shift alot) Also, sopranino is a soprano, not that its own voice type tbh.
her lowest notes are lower than most natural altos have access to! a lot of singers that have a great high register don’t bother to develop such a strong base in the lows. you can tell she spends a lot of time working on expanding her range and being as versatile as possible, one of the most admiral traits she has a singer :)
Bb2 it's not that low.
@@L2_Impart yes.. it is lol 😭
@@nadiajoiner6243 For girls. I can easy hit G2/F#2.
@@L2_Impart ?? hayley is a girl so i don’t see your point LMAO
@@nadiajoiner6243 I mean, everyone can do Bb2 when almost is air.
6:32 that C#5 and the C5 after it in Decode are still so fucking epic
9:59 having a consecutive climb of Still Into You-s just cracks me up for some reason
7:13 petition for a caught in the middle/pure love mashup
So happy you're back to posting again. I'd love a vocal range video for her more recent live vocals from 2019 to today
She is such an incredible vocalist!
10:23 belting E6 on their new song This is Why. Check 2:50 of TIW!
*E5
hahhaha nobody can belt E6 MyGod hahah
@@hmaddendeniece Williams, Francine Jones can also see male belting and mixing in 6th octave
She's such an icon
SOOOOO GOOD!!!
8:26 That E5 at the end of Ain't it Fun is so epic 🔥
any chance of a Hayley Williams screaming compilation?
Itd be very short i feel
best singer
10:36 wait but that's actually insane
God, i love her so much. And i'm still unsure if shes soprano or mezzo. Internet is really undecisive with that answer
She’s a soprano
@@Jessiepmore is it usual for a soprano to live in her lower range that confortably or is it just good technique?
@@carlossimancas7109 I would say she’s a bright mezzo, she’s a lot more comfortable in her lower range and the only reason shes able to belt so high all of the time is due to good technique and mostly using mixed voice and masked head voice instead of a balanced belty sound as of now at least. Kinda like Meghan Trainer who also uses a bright heady mix despite her natural chest voice being that of a mezzo.
Hailey is very obvious soprano
@@knaxor comfortable in low doesnt mean you are Mezzo her lows are airy and weak also her vocal weight doesnt match Mezzo weight she have light/bright voice and high tessitura
C7! Wow 4 octaves!
Me with 2.8 octaves 😭😭
She went lower than what is posted here in “all i wanted”
All I wanted gets to F#3 from what I've checked. Excellent performance!
I guess there's a lot of lower notes in Flowers For Vases.
this is so interesting but can someone explain this in like width of piano keys? i have no musical background and the letters in the title mean nothing to me
I’ll try to explain! Do you have a piano? That would definitely make it easier to understand/visualize. Otherwise you can try finding a picture or an interactive version on Google :)
Most pianos have 88 keys. On a piano like that, it’s actually pretty straightforward, because C1 is the first/deepest C, on the left side, and C8 is the last/highest C, all the way to the right. Maybe you’ve heard of middle C? That one’s C4.
I don’t know if you just meant ‘numbers’ when you wrote ‘letters’, or if you don’t know what the letters mean either - I’ll give a quick explanation of the letters too, just in case! If you already know this, feel free to skip it 👌
An octave spans 13 keys. Every key represents half a note - a full note is two keys up/down from the starting one. The letters without any symbols after are the white keys (like C, D etc.). The ones with symbols after the letters are the black keys (C#, Eb etc.). Each of the black keys have two different names, which can mostly be used interchangeably. The symbols tell you whether they’re half a note HIGHER (#) or LOWER (b) from the key of the letter. So the note between C and D, for instance, can be called both C# and Db. Only exceptions (no pun intended) here are that E# and Fb usually aren’t used, because there is only half a note between E and F, so it makes more sense to just use those - same with B and C, you wouldn’t call it B# when you can just call it C. This explanation ended up dragging on for a bit, hope you don’t mind! So, an octave consists of these keys/letters: C, C#/Db, D, D#/Eb, E, F, F#/Gb, G, G#/Ab, A, A#/Bb, B and then the C an octave above the first one.
When you say eg. that someone has 3 octaves of vocal range, you count the last note as part of that, but when writing down notes like in this video, the octaves/numbers change at every C, so that next C is the start of a new octave, not the last note of the octave before. So the last few notes before middle C, for instance, are A3, Bb3 and B3 - and then once you hit the C, a new octave begins and it goes C4, C#4, D4 and so on, until you reach C5 and the next octave begins.
Again, on a standard piano the lowest C is C1, but there are a couple notes even lower than that, the very lowest is A0 (on the piano, that is). C8 is the very highest note on the piano. But - as far as I know, at least - there ARE higher and lower notes than that, but they would be VERY difficult to sing. Still, I would guess a tea kettle or something like that would be able to make a sound higher than C8 😅 And of course, at some point there are notes which the human ear can’t physically hear, but I don’t know exactly when that happens (probably also depends on age and other factors).
Hope my explanation was understandable, please write if there’s anything else you’re wondering about! I’m a musician and a singer, so I could talk about this stuff for days haha.
I love 💘💖 you
Her whistle note sounds like Mariah Carey.
What's at 4:34? Sounds like the magic's in the makeup by no doubt
Her cover of Nineteen by Tegan & Sara
@@Jessiepmore Ty! Great video btw!
does anyone know what the song is at 1:59? It's for sure a remix of hard times but no idea which remix it is :'(
It’s the BBC live lounge version
@@Jessiepmore ahh thank you :D
whats the song at 3:18 :o
ua-cam.com/video/25n0rxKnbLQ/v-deo.html
2:54 does anyone know what song this is?
It’s My Friend from Petals for Armor
@@TVampire ty
Whats the song at 1:54 please?
Uncomfortably Numb
7:52 song name?
It’s Paramore’s cover of You Ain’t Woman Enough by Loretta Lynn
7:56 What's this from???
ua-cam.com/video/3uRMWGGfD-k/v-deo.htmlsi=6rTELbaAwRtvLPv0
I didn't see Hallelujah
what’s the song at 8:44 ??
Swim in Silence
@@Jessiepmore What's the song before that one?
@@UnlovedZetsu Turn It Off
Which is the song? 5:10
Renegade?
renegade from the singles club
spinto or dramatic soprano?
Light lyric
@@firethroughtheskies2648 her belt is too thin as she ascend her natural light lyric soprano timbre comes out and so is her head voice lacking volume output weight and is super underdeveloped
@@ri260 well I would say that has to do with her approach and style so she stay relevant in pop blah blah. Her mid range is initially what make me think she's a full lyric soprano. She doesn't adducted her vocal cord the same as she ascend, if she did she would same the same up there.
Also, do you know park hyo shin? Would you say full lyric or light lyric tenor with dramatic approach?
@@firethroughtheskies2648 those not natural volume output and weight she overpushed and depressed her larynx a lot to sing rough pop punk style belt her voice is girly naturally
@@ri260 yeah whether light lyric or full lyric, she's not big sized soprano that's for sure. Full lyric soprano is quite girly voice sometimes tho. I don't think her voice is as high and bright like light lyric soprano tho (as someone who play pitch shift alot)
Also, sopranino is a soprano, not that its own voice type tbh.
Ok, she can't be a mezzo.(?)
She’s a soprano
what's the song at 3:37?
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