It is possible! I was an alto but am now a soprano. It takes many yeasr of practice...you must learn to push your chest voice safely with out hurting yourself.
Falsetto.
You missed a 't' 'artificially high; above the normal voice range; "a falsetto voice" ' Typed 'define: falsetto' into google. Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Falsetto
You may be having difficulty singing in falsetto is your voice has changed. You can try taking voice lessons to get your skills back on track.
In singing, you have ranges called your Chest Voice and your Falsetto. When you use your chest voice you are singing in a comfortable range and you have a lot of power behind it...It isn't very airy. When you use your falsetto, you are singing a note that is in the higher range of a scale. Your tone is very air filled. It comes out quietly and airilly. :) hope that answers your question.
falsetto
Falsetto
I'm a professional classical baritone and I can tell you that is completely normal to have your falsetto range extend beyond your chest voice.
Shane Gaston
His tone sounds like a tenor, but he is actually a high baratone with extended falsetto/head voice.(these are not the same thing, falsetto sounds airy and head voice sounds pure like chest voice)
Tenor. Unless you take the full range into consideration, so then it would be a countertenor. A countertenor uses their full voice which includes the normal range, and the falsetto voice, but the countertenor also uses the falsetto range alot.
Up until 1986, he had a high tenor voice and also used a famous falsetto. After having surgery on his throat in 1986, his voice range lowered to baritone and lost his falsetto.
Yes of course!"The issue of the female falsetto voice has been met with some controversy, especially among vocal pedagogists. Many books on the art of singing completely ignore this issue, simply gloss over it, or insist that women do not have falsetto. This controversy, however, does not exist within the speech pathology community and arguments against the existence of female falsetto do not align with current physiological evidence. Motion picture and video studies of laryngeal action reveal that women can and do produce falsetto, and electromyographic studies by several leading speech pathologists and vocal pedagogists provide further confirmation.[4]One possible explanation for this failure to recognize the female falsetto is the fact that the difference in timbre and dynamic level between the modal and falsetto registers often is not as pronounced in female voices as it is in male voices. This is due in part to the difference in the length and mass of the vocal folds and to the difference in frequency ranges.[5] It is an established fact that women have a falsetto register and that many young female singers substitute falsetto for the upper portion of the modal voice.[1] Some vocal pedagogists believe that this failure to recognize the female falsetto voice has led to the misidentification of young contraltos and mezzo-sopranos as sopranos, as it is easier for these lower voice types to sing in the soprano tessitura using their falsetto register."http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Falsetto