A male singer with a high voice that is five letters long is: tenor. Note that there are males with higher voices than this, but all of these are more than five letters long.
A saprano is a female singer that sings high, it is the break in a females voice but the high break. Female Opera singers sing Saprano. An Auto is the oposite this is the low break in a females voice. Hope this helped.
high voice (:
alto is a voice part. for female there are 4 voice parts. soprano 1(high range) soprano 2(medium high range) mezzo-soprano(medium with a darker tone. also know as a "belter") and alto(lower range). So an alto is a lower female voice.
Probably one of the few songs by La Roux
alto is a low girl voice, suprano is a high girl voice. tenor is a high boy voice, bass is a low boy voice.
Freddie Mercury Of Course.
Nightwish. [:
If you want to know if you are a low singer or a high singer usually you are better at singing higher or lower so that is how you can tell.
Alto
her voice was more high, clear and beautiful than the song of a bird crying to the rising sun.
no Justin bieber is the worst singer he has such a high voice so theoraticaly he sucks and is not the best
a singer needs to at least go to a musical colleqe they need to have a good voice and they need to be abil to go from low to high vocals
You dont really need any to be a singer, maybe drama, but you just need a good voice and go to auditions!
A saprano is a female singer that sings high, it is the break in a females voice but the high break. Female Opera singers sing Saprano. An Auto is the oposite this is the low break in a females voice. Hope this helped.
First attest in English; 1730, "the highest singing voice," from Italian soprano "the treble in music," literally "high," from sopra "above," from Latin supra, feminine ablative singular of super. Meaning "a singer having a soprano voice" is from 1738. Soprano Saxophone is attested from 1859.
He just sings a very high pitched voice.
First attest in English; 1730, "the highest singing voice," from Italian soprano "the treble in music," literally "high," from sopra "above," from Latin supra, feminine ablative singular of super. Meaning "a singer having a soprano voice" is from 1738. Soprano saxophone is attested from 1859.