Treble, alto, bass
Treble is the highest. Bass is lowest, then alto, then treble.
Going high to low, it goes treble, alto, then bass.
In order from highest to lowest, the common clefs are: Treble Alto Tenor Bass
When you are speaking of singing voices, the usual four are (from high to low) soprano, alto, tenor and bass. So alto does sing higher than bass. When you are speaking of written staffs, the two staffs are treble (higher) and bass (lower). An alto singing part is typically written on the treble staff; but the alto range extends down (using ledger lines below the staff) into notes that can also be written on the bass staff.
Contrary to what most people believe (3 clefs: Bass, Treble, Alto), there are actually 7 that I know of. Yes, some are Treble, Bass, and Alto. But, there are four more: Soprano, Mezzo Soprano, Baritone, and Tenor. I believe Tenors usually use Baritone Clef though.
Treble is the highest. Bass is lowest, then alto, then treble.
Going high to low, it goes treble, alto, then bass.
Bass is the lowest voice-part. It goes (from lowest to highest): bass, baritone, tenor, contra-alto, alto, mezzo-soprano, soprano
In order from highest to lowest, the common clefs are: Treble Alto Tenor Bass
The voice range from highest to lowest is as follows: soprano, alto, tenor, bass.
Treble, alto, bass, tenor, percussion. Treble and bass are most common.
The standard ranges of the human voice from highest to lowest are soprano, mezzo-soprano, alto (or contralto) for females, and tenor, baritone, bass for males. Each range has its own specific characteristics and vocal qualities that determine where a singer's voice best fits within these categories.
Bass Baritone Tenor Alto Soprano
Soprano, alto, tenor, bass (from highest to lowest)
The singing voice range from highest to lowest is first soprano, second soprano, first alto, second alto, first tenor, second tenor, baritone, and bass.
When you are speaking of singing voices, the usual four are (from high to low) soprano, alto, tenor and bass. So alto does sing higher than bass. When you are speaking of written staffs, the two staffs are treble (higher) and bass (lower). An alto singing part is typically written on the treble staff; but the alto range extends down (using ledger lines below the staff) into notes that can also be written on the bass staff.
(from lowest to highest) baritone, tenor, alto, and finally soprano. -- The lowest mail singing voice is the Bass. then Baritone, then tenor and counter tenor. In a mixed choir its Bass, tenor alto and then soprano