Quote from: Devin87 on June 03, 2010, 08:32:32 PM
It's also about how you see your voice in your head. Before I took voice lessons in college I saw my voice as being low. I always tried to sing along with the male singers on the radio and stuff and so I was never in tune. I took voice lessons and it turns out I'm a soprano and my voice just wasn't meant to sing low, which is why it sounded so horrible when I tried to push it down there. It took me a long time and a lot of coaching and pushing from my professor before I was able to sing up high comfortably and now I'm a much better singer. Of course, I'm going to have to learn all over again once the T starts lowering my voice more. But for someone who never had lessons and wasn't pushed to sing in a female range, your voice stating to match what's in your head will definitely sound better than trying to push a female voice to sing like a male like I was doing all those years.
Yeah, I've suspected for a while that I'm trying to sing too low for my voice. I have the best control in the tenor range, but the lower notes really hit the bottom of my range, and that "bottoming out" sensation is unpleasant.
But my voice breaks and cracks and crackles when I try to go into the soprano range - I can't even sing along with the vast majority of female singers. Even Cher, whose voice is most like mine, occasionally goes where I can't. And the very high male singers like Journey...well, there's no hope. So I have a really narrow functioning vocal range, about the bottom 2/3 of Cher's, or most of the bottom half of Kurt's from Glee. And I have wondered if my inability to use my upper range is really because my vocal range is that narrow, or if it's just a lack of control and could be fixed with voice training...but then I've never felt at all motivated to learn to sing soprano.