On female voices below contralto
-
- KVRist
- 111 posts since 22 Jun, 2003 from Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
I was talking to this woman who admitted when we were discussing singing that she could not sing contralto as it was too high for her. She commented that middle C (C5) was a complete struggle for her to hit though, despite that, she had at least an octave or more of range below that. Would that essentially make her a female octavist? Or just a deep contralto? What's the word for it?
What the *ZAP* ok... so that's what orange does....
-
- KVRian
- 1084 posts since 12 Sep, 2008 from Your basement
Tenor
or perhaps
Teńorita?
or perhaps
Teńorita?
-
- KVRist
- 350 posts since 11 May, 2008
I've always heard and used the term "Bass" in those cases. I've also learned that Shirley Bassey for instance was a Bass-woman.
In my country (at least) I've learned these registers:
Man: Bass, Baritone, Tenor, Counter-Tenor, Tenorino
Woman: Bass, Contralto, Mezzo-Soprano, Soprano, Sopranino, Whistle register.
In my country (at least) I've learned these registers:
Man: Bass, Baritone, Tenor, Counter-Tenor, Tenorino
Woman: Bass, Contralto, Mezzo-Soprano, Soprano, Sopranino, Whistle register.
Play fair and square!
-
- KVRist
- 350 posts since 11 May, 2008
of course "Bass" applied to woman is relative. The Bass in woman is NOT in the same range of the Bass man. For definition woman play one octave higher as man. If I write in treble clef an A, I expect a man to sound 220hz and a woman to sound 440hz in that same written A.
So, a Bass woman, would sound (to me) like a baritone or low-tenor tops.
So, a Bass woman, would sound (to me) like a baritone or low-tenor tops.
Play fair and square!
- KVRAF
- 26033 posts since 20 Oct, 2007 from gonesville
Well, it's somewhat inaccurate in terms of orchestration to call an alto voice a tenor or a soprano an alto,
so...
Bass is bass. I know a woman who sings Barry White at pitch. She was born with female nads. Singing Barry White is singing bass. When she did it, my saying 'she's singing bass!' was a true statement.
"Cassandra Wilson gets down into baritone range with clarity" is 'a true statement', IE: one that requires no qualification.
OTOH: "C below middle C is at the bottom of this bass singer's range", is another kind of statement.
so...
Bass is bass. I know a woman who sings Barry White at pitch. She was born with female nads. Singing Barry White is singing bass. When she did it, my saying 'she's singing bass!' was a true statement.
"Cassandra Wilson gets down into baritone range with clarity" is 'a true statement', IE: one that requires no qualification.
OTOH: "C below middle C is at the bottom of this bass singer's range", is another kind of statement.