You try really hard dude. Practice everyday, but never force your voice. Stick to the notes you can easily sing and eventually you will see that the higher notes you previously had to strain for will not be strained anymore. You'll be able to sing them. A G4 is about as high as you can get without strain kicking in. Note: that is only 6 semitones away from a tenors normal range. But then again you have 6 semitones of lower notes than a tenor.
Be a Baritone alright! That's what you are I'm guessing? So stick with it and people will say you sound great. Baritone is a stronger, richer voice and has a great tone when compared to a tenor. If you try to be a tenor, cracks will appear and the tenor guy will almost always get the role instead of you.
Some extra notes: If you're a teen your voice is still developing so your range will gain some extra range when your adult voice settles in. Then you might find out you're a baritenor in which case you will have the range of both a baritone and tenor. Take care of your voice, especially if you're a teen.
Good luck. And use what you where born with/don't try to be something you're not.
diva, soprano, alto, bass, tenor, baritone
Usually it's in the tenor range. It can be easily adapted to high baritone.
Opera (loudly sung notes with no mic/amps) : Tenor Rock and others : Baritone
The main thing between tenor and mezzo-soprano and tenor is the gender of the singer! Tenors are male and mezzo-sopranos are female. In terms of absolute pitch there is quite a difference too as the female voice sings generally an octave above those of men. As far as the order of voice types go, a mezzo-soprano lies between the highest general category of female voices, the soprano and the lowest, the alto. Bridging the gap between female and male voices is the counter-tenor (a male voice type) who sings in falsetto and has cross over in range with the bottom of the female range (and, in fact, much of the female range when the counter-tenor, or even, male-soprano has an extreme extension at the top). Below counter-tenor lies the tenor, the highest of the "full voice" male voice types.
To name just two - Simon Estes - Bass-baritone Darron Flagg - tenor.
A bari tenor is a baritone who has a tenor extension... for instance singing c5 a.k.a tenor C! FALSETTO doesnt count!
tenor
Baritone
He's a baritone.
from top to bottom: soprano alto counter tenor tenor counter baritone baritone bass
Tenor (:
Tenor. Males usually sing the upper range of the bass clef as tenor, baritone the middle, and bass the lowest.
baritone
tenor
High Tenor, almost a Countertenor.
Yes there are two main voice types for men, tenor and baritone. A Baritone has alower vocal range while a tenor has a higher vocal range.
trey songz is a high baritone