Susan's Place Logo

News:

According to Google Analytics 25,259,719 users made visits accounting for 140,758,117 Pageviews since December 2006

Main Menu

What Was Your Voice Like Pre-T?

Started by Liminal Stranger, June 27, 2013, 01:31:42 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

androgynoid

I'm pre-T, and my voice is... odd. Kind of a mixture of and Marian Call, with a really high falsetto range. When I've been keeping up with my singing I've got a range of C3 to F6ish (C4 is middle C, right? I can never remember). My speaking voice tends to be rather deep, but clearly female, and my singing voice is nearly all falsetto; I can't really get higher than an A4 without switching to head voice.

I'm really hoping to keep some of my high range on T and be one of those rare men who can still sing soprano. I know they exist; I sing in a women's choir with two men! However, I probably won't, and I'm okay with that.
  •  

Liminal Stranger

Lots of interesting responses here! Yes, C4 is middle C. Apparently my voice has a passable tone to it, if I get a better microphone I'll do a recording for comparison whenever I finally get on T. But even with it making me sound even higher-pitched I pass as a young boy over Skype calls and whatnot even to complete strangers.




"And if you feel that you can't go on, in the light you will find the road"
- In the Light, Led Zeppelin
  •  

therewolf

I was a very high soprano. I sounded like Mickey Mouse. Now I'd say I'm probably an alto, although my singing voice is entirely destroyed. I could probably take lessons and get it sorted out again, but I haven't.
  •  

aleon515

I've wondered about something, re: guys unable to sing since they took T. I've had a rather different experience. BUT, I also played the recorder and the Indian flute for awhile-- how that fits is this: In order to play low notes on either you have to control your breath. Playing low notes takes a LOT more breath than higher notes. So my theory-- learn to control your breath and you can sing. Wonder if breath control exercises and so on would help?


--Jay
  •  

VenomGaia

I'm  pre-T. I have a voice that's sort of in-between, at least when I hear it. I tried figuring out what my vocal range was, but since I can't sing...
I can hit notes in the mezzo-soprano range, and the lowest I can go is a Tenor. I kinda like my range for now, but I hope that if/when I start taking T, my speaking voice will get deeper.
I'm your guide to Hell.
--
Tis better to live as you see fit and die quickly, than to spend a life in misery and die slowly.
--
Currently working on a comic, check back when I finish the first page.
  •  

Crow

I believe a more musically-inclined friend described my pre-T voice as alto. I don't know much about voice types, but I know it was pretty high. For illustrative purposes, here is a pre-transition video from riiight around the time I first came out as trans (like 4 years ago):



I've been on T for a year and 2 months, and I doubt even a skilled musician could manage to classify my current voice into a category-- right now it sounds somewhere between "getting over a cold" and "sang karaoke for 5 hours straight and killed my vocal cords." (This results in some hilarious croaking noises during song time at the summer camp I work at.)

Here's a video of what my voice sounds like now, to prove just how much I sound like an opera singer with a head-cold:

Top Surgery Fund: $200/7,000
  •  

PixieBoy

Before T, my voice was pretty high to me but a normal girl's voice to others. Now it's started cracking and I sound like an idiot all the time, haha. I was sent to a speech therapist pre-T so they could get recordings of my voice pre- and post-T and help me acclimatize into my new voice, and they told me that I was really good at hitting the high notes but not too good at lowering my voice.
...that fey-looking freak kid with too many books and too much bodily fat
  •  

Edge

My voice is annoyingly high even compared to a woman's and I sound like a little kid. Seriously, when I answer my cell phone and it's a telemarketer, they ask if they can speak to an adult. It's very frustrating.
  •  

Darkflame

When I used to sing I was an alto. But in the past I did voice work and I have a naturally flexible voice range. My normal voice has been described as gender neutral. When I'm relaxed it would be hard to tell if my voice belonged to a guy or a girl. Mostly because of this raspy tone I have. And I use my skills to tip my voice off into the lower range, so I don't usually get outed by my voice. But when I'm anxious my voice pitches up ::) man I can't wait until I get on T
If I let where I'm from burn I can never return

"May those who accept their fate find happiness, those who defy it, glory"
  •