Same way you get to Carnegie Hall. Practice, practice, practice. Run your scales til your voice becomes more elastic. Mind your breath control and sing from your diaphragm. Good posture , mind you keep straight and chin up to keep your soft palate from occluding your throat. And have fun and sing from your heart. O Canada is a beautiful anthem.
1st soprano is higher than 2nd soprano.
Soprano is stressed on the second syllable.
You can't just become a first soprano. Learn how to use your voice correctly, though, and you can be soaring over a high C! I consider myself a second soprano but since learning how to use my voice my range has gotten higher - my highest note is an E above high C.
SHe's a 1st soprano
Second Soprano: Should be able to hit notes close to a high c. Sing higher then the altos. Have a sweet voice, altos usually have low talking voices. First Soprano: Are to hit the highest notes above a high c. Should be able to sing and hold high notes.
I am a second soprano but I know that I could sing the first soprano part if my choir teacher would let me. A first soprano must be able to sing the very high notes in a song while a second soprano sings slightly lower notes but they are still pretty high. It does not really matter for you to know that I am a 2nd soprano it matters what type of soprano you are.
Depends how high you mean. If your talking about less complicated pieces with a short range to about an F then your prob a second, but if your talking about more complicated and higher pieces that go up to an A or High C then your probably a first, of course all in the choir sense. In opera and classical music a choir soprano is equivalent to an operatic contralto, in some cases. It all depends on the tessitura. But in choir a 1st soprano is the highest and a 2nd is the middle(mezzo-soprano).
The singing voice range from highest to lowest is first soprano, second soprano, first alto, second alto, first tenor, second tenor, baritone, and bass.
Yes, there are : First Soprano (Magna Peccatrix) : Second Soprano (Una poenitentium) : Third Soprano (Mater gloriosa) : First Alto (Mulier Samaritana) : Second Alto (Maria Aegyptiaca) : Tenor (Doctor Marianus) : Baritone (Pater ecstaticus) : Bass (Pater profundus) : Boys' Choir : Mixed Choirs I, II
a first soprano sings everything including high flats & sharps they also sometimes sing all lower/mid notes too not just high
Im not sure what you mean... but I am a soprano and it helps to just sing. I mean do NOT think about impressing people or hitting the notes. Just let them float. I sing anywhere anytime.
Canada is second country in the world, in terms of size