I'm a tenor, and until recently thought I was a Tenor 1. I hit high C's for auditions when they ask me.
My new voice teacher is an MD/Voice Specialist, and he did a medical assesment of my voice. He told me I was a Lyric Tenor, but a low one. Then he said that this has nothing to do with how high I'll be able to go, or how low. That's just biologically what DNA I was given.
Broadwayfreak I love your avatar!! "Not the Mama!" lol I haven't seen that show since I was a single digit! Anyways mine is a G#3 to G5 and I am a mezzo/belter. I can sing legit as well as I can belt.
"Have a child for warmth and a baker for bread and a prince for... whatever!"
I'm not sure what note range I have, but I'm inbetween baritone and tenor, mostly tenor...a low tenor! Haha! I can sing two octaves in regular singing and if falsetto counts, then four octaves!
"Needless to say the crew is well acquainted with my ass and that's ok because they are the coolest guys ever."
- Idina Menzel
Alto to 2nd soprano. I don't particularly like singing alto parts, but I can and will if assigned to. But I basically stay within the mezzo-to-second soprano area.
haha, this is such a funny question for me to answer, in paticualr because I'm one of those people that does a number of diffrent things so it's very hard to catgorize me. (I'm not good with musical notes) I can sing Tenor to first soprano...I think I go to the High F or G *above high C* ( or higer, I think I go even higer than that) to some where low low low F or G, below Treble C or something like that all I know is that I span alot of octaves. I 'm a belter and ligit mezzo as well as an Operatic (lyric Soprano) singer. So I do those things both. But when Asked I say Mezzo belter/First Soprano
"You gotta be original, because if you're like someone else, what do they need you for?" -Bernadette Peters
SUPPORT ALL SHOOK UP!!!
I am a tenor, but I have a very convincing falsetto. I was acctually cast as Mary Sunshine in our schools producton of Chicago. My dad wasn't to happy, but he got over it once he realized it was just a show.
I know i can hit a High B, i'm a tenor/baritone. Everyone calls me a baritone but I have tenor notes. I guess its cause I can go pretty low as well. I wish I had that C, maybe with some more work. I use to think a high G was high for a guy, but not anymore. What would you say is a good range to be a leading Broadway man? Like Hunter Foster or Patrick Wilson or people like that. (those are just my favs)
Actually, a lot of voice determination is based on the quality of the sound, the timbre, rather than the notes you can sing. I mean, I can sing lower pitches, but they still have soprano quality to them, where as a true alto has a much richer quality to those notes.
That said, I am a true soprano, who doesn't find much that's comfortable to sing in much of the newer musicals...lol