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Vocal Range Classifications Print E-mail
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Written by triplethreat   

Vocal Range Classifications

Soprano Range

Chest: G3-Eb4
Lower passaggio: Fb4
Lower middle: Bb3-C5
Upper middle: C#5-F#5
Upper passaggio: F#5
Upper: G5-C#6
Flageolet: D6-A6

Lyric coloratura soprano: The lightest, highest, and most flexible type of soprano. Often weak at the bottom.
Dramatic coloratura soprano: Darker tone, but still very high and flexible. Think "Queen of the Night" from The Magic Flute.
Lyric soprano: Fairly light tone, lots of clarity, warmth, and "bell-like" sound. Blossoms in the upper middle of the register.
Soubrette soprano: Very light tone. Often plays the "maid" sort of characters in operas. Typically, only younger singers are soubrettes.
Spinto soprano: A little darker and fuller, less flexibility but a "fatter" sound.
Dramatic soprano: The darkest, "fattest" soprano sound. The type of soprano often used in Wagnerian opera.

Mezzo-Soprano Range

Chest: E3(F3)-E4(F4)
Lower passaggio: F4
Lower middle: C4-Bb4
Upper middle- B4-E5(F5)
Upper passaggio: E5(F5)
Upper: F5(F#5)-Bb5(B5)
Flageolet: C6-

Lyric mezzo-soprano: Less upper range than a soprano, more strength and full tone in the bottom registers. Fairly light tone and good flexibility.
Italian mezzo-soprano: Darker and fuller than a lyric mezzo. Often seen in Verdi.
French mezzo-soprano: Slender, low tone. Think "Carmen".

Contralto "Alto" Range

Chest: D3-G4(Ab4)
Lower passaggio: G4
Lower middle: F4-A4
Upper middle- Bb4-D5
Upper passaggio: D5
Upper: Eb5-Ab5
Flageolet: A5 (rarely developed)

Contralto: The lowest female voice. Almost tenor-like in sound. Very comfortable on the bottom, pushed on the top. Mostly used in oratorio, not often seen in opera.

Vocal Registers

Chest

Nearly all singing done in the "chest register" involves a mix. It is the “spoken” sort of sound that pop and Broadway singers use almost exclusively. Because of the thickening of the vocal folds that singing in chest entails, the glottis closes firmly so that when air pressure builds up below, it bursts out. Each puff of air opens the glottis explosively- essentially slamming the folds together, then ripping them apart again. This makes the use of chest register VERY hard on your vocal folds, and can cause permanent damage through the exclusive use of this register. It is only appropriate in the pitches below the lower passaggio in each voice type.

Lower and Upper Middle

A mixed tone is a way to create colour and fuller sound in the middle part of the register- the lower the pitch, the more chest can be used. When the pitch raises, so does the amount of "headiness" in the tone. Some teachers choose not to differentiate between the lower-middle and upper-middle, instead choosing to present them as one long middle register, which I prefer to use as well for more elementary explanations. Mixed voice is simply the use of elements of both pure chest and pure head registers.

Upper

This is often referred to as "voce di testa"- there is a unique feeling after the upper passiggio into this register, and the reason for it is a thinning of the edges of the vocal folds. It happens all the way through the middle register, but after the passaggio, it instantly become more pronounced, and singing feels very different, as less of the folds are available to offer resistance to the breath. The glottis will not open and close completely. This is where the "pure head register" begins.

Flageolet

The flageolet register has a very different timbre from the others- it's called "bell", "flute", and "piccolo" for a reason. Timbre in this range can be described as the ringing of a bell of the echo of a high pitch. Developing this register strengthens the upper register directly beneath it, and it's essential for coloratura and soubrette sopranos.

**A quick note on passaggio: passaggio is the "break" that occurs when switching from mixed register into either chest or upper register- these notes are often weak and uncomfortable to sing for beginners.

“C4” is ‘middle’ C (as it is four octaves from the bottom of the piano). Therefore, C5 is one octave above ‘middle’ C, and G3 is a major fourth below. Make sense? If not, here are some quick examples:

C4 - middle C
C3 - the C below middle C
F3 - the F below middle C
B5 - the B above middle C
C6 - the C two octaves above middle C

Comments (9) >> feed
...
written by Molly, June 26, 2007

wow, this helped explain alot!

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written by Jessica, May 28, 2008

in chorus, i am a soprano, i have a very large range
but i have a really good, but high belt, a lot like idina menzel
what would that be classified as?

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written by Emily, November 29, 2008

Mezzo-Soprano!!! smilies/grin.gif

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written by Holly, February 19, 2009

Thanks, I knew I was a soprano, but I didn't know exact details like this!

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written by Zoe Marshall, April 30, 2009

Contraltos rule!!

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written by Tamsin Stone, August 04, 2009

i can go pretty high but only in my head voice, but i can go quite low too, lower than average, but i still have no idea what sort of voice i have!!!! HELP.

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written by Aisling Chalian, September 15, 2009

There's a reason I call myself a "sopralto" -- I usually end up in the soprano section of any chorus, but I cannot project in my head voice at all. I've found a vocal coach, but I haven't been able to work with him yet due to certain events going on in my life at present.

I can go as low as D3 and I top out at E6, but I know altos who can stay in chest voice longer than I can; I have to go into head voice at around A4, and I appear to be miming until I get to D5. My problem has been chorus teachers who "teach" projection by telling me to project. How can I project if I don't know how?

I once met an insane bar band leader who thought a woman should never, ever use head voice -- whether she was covering a Karen Carpenter tune or one by Mariah Carey. I guess he thinks female opera singers don't use head voice either? :facepalm:

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written by Katarina Andersson, October 13, 2009

A lot of people have wide ranges that don't fit into the exact molds of what's listed above, or other typical range classifications. That's where human individuality comes in- take notice of where you feel most comfortable. I have a low extension that goes down to a C#3, but I'd never call myself a contralto (not because contraltos aren't super-fly, but because I feel that my upper range is my "happy place", so to speak.)

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written by Anna Robbins, November 06, 2009

Thank you! I definitely fall into the Mezzo-Soprano range. It describes my range almost exactly!

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