Sherie Renee Scott's voice is amazing, so is Idina's.
I have a really low voice, so I could do guys party really well. I know that's not feminine at all, but I didn't get to pick my voice for me, i'm kinda glad I have a low voice. People always tell me I sound like NLB, but he kinda has a nasal voice. Which I find adorable.
But I don't have a nasal voice.. wait, yes I do. I do. I just relized that.
Sherie Renee Scott Idina Menzel Kristin Chenoweth (just her soprano) Kelli O'Hara A little Celia Keenan-Bolger, a little Sutton Foster And that's just current people! And yes, I realise the fact that if all those voices were combined, it would sound odd :) but I love all of their genuinely different voices!
"I'm thinking about how if you took the W in
answer, and the H in ghost, and the extra A in aardvark, and the T in listen, you could keep saying WHAT but no one would ever hear you because the whole word would be silent."
Please support BC/EFA at goodsearch.com!
Search for anything, and your charity will get a cent!
I always learned that you should strive to have your own sound, but still, after hearing clips of Jennifer Hope Wills (current Christine), I wouldn't mind having her voice.
Arghh! Grammar pet peeve #1: your vs you're. "Your" is a possessive pronoun. "You're" is the contraction of "you are."
<<
Although I like singing, but I don't know if other people enjoy listening to me as much as I do haha, that being said I'd pick Tracie Thoms or Shoshana.
I'm more than content with my own ,but if I had to chose I'd mix Adam Levene's crazy range w/ Gavin Creel's voice.
I have NEVER met Cheyenne Jackson. I have never hung out with him in his dressing room, he did not tweet me, he never bought me a beverage, and he mostly certainly didn't tickle me. . .that is all.
Julia Murney's versatility is incredible. Also, Sutton and Sherie are my other two favorites.
"This table, he is over one hundred years old. If I could, I would take an old gramophone needle and run it along the surface of the wood. To hear the music of the voices. All that was said." - Doug Wright, I Am My Own Wife