Quote from: iKate on August 25, 2015, 10:37:47 PM
Well yeah that's all well and good. I wish more people would start threads on voice training. There is room for everyone.
I don't think surgery is that expensive though. Certainly cheaper than FFS and cheaper than SRS. Might be around the same price as an orchi in some cases, actually.
As for FFS, you can pass and look good without it. I can't, which is why I'm going to get it. I mean I had one woman here who told me I look like Morgan Freeman for crying out loud, and then proceeded to taunt me in PM. So yeah, I'm a bit hung up on it. Hormones may be doing something, but I don't think it is enough for me to be passable to the degree that I want. I want to be happy.
If I had the financial means for full FFS AND VFS I would be all over it like a fat dude on a cheeseburger lol (well I am not a fat dude, yet I can never say no to a cheeseburger gosh I am getting so hungry now).
Also, and I don't like sugarcoating, (ikate) I've seen profile pics of you on here from some time ago and the most recent one you just took off and I am amazed at the changes I've seen, and to me you pass even without makeup, you are a natural. You may be lucky to be intersexed or something, which I think I am not. I am the one who really needs FFS AND VHS but I can't afford either at the moment. And if I had any money available, I'd go for type three forehead recontouring in a heartbit because I totally hate having to wear bangs to conceal those two bumps over my eyebrows. But that's neither here nor there, we're discussing voice therapy and surgery now.
I am discovering some interesting stuff through my daily voice practice. I may start a thread about it soon. But sadly it is kind of complicated because in order to get it, people should know at least the very basics of voice (musical note and octave), which isn't really complicated at all. All people need is a chromatic tuner which shows both the musical note and octave. On my smart phone I use a free application named Pitchlab lite. I suppose this application is available on any mobile system platform. It is a great application, the only "but" it has is that, as usual for free applications, it kind of drains the battery a bit fast.
When one discovers FOR REAL what voice type one is (bass, bass-baritone, baritone, baritone-tenor, tenor, high tenor, countertenor), it makes A WORLD OF DIFFERENCE in what one CAN REALLY EXPECT from both voice therapy and voice surgery.
I've had the privilege of speaking with a few trans women, with different voice types and different ages. And I've noticed this: the MTF women who have a voice break in the countertenor register, ALWAYS are the ones who turn out with GREAT super-passable voices, specially if they started training them during puberty, whether they were on HRT or not.
Since most cis males are born as baritones, and can be expected to break on E4 (secondo passaggio), according to my new discoveries and real-life analysis from my own voice practice and listening to the voice of other trans women as well as cis women like my sister, cosmetologist, hairstylist, etc, they (baritones) may expect to have a NATURAL-AUTHENTIC-SOUNDING fem voice which average is an octave lower (E3). This is FIVE semitones lower than the so-called "female average pitch", an A3. Interestingly, I think the average increase in pitch (anybody who has actually consulted a voice surgeon correct me if I'm wrong on this, please) any of the current voice doctors offers today is around that: five semitones. Which is GREAT for a baritone, but excessive for a tenor, for example. So it sounds like the current doctors are catering to the majority of MTF population, that is, those born baritones.
So, a baritone MTF who trains her voice, may expect to have a female voice averaging E3, that is, ranging D3 to B3, through lots of voice training. If they manage to eliminate ALL or almost all male resonance under and over tones and breathiness, they can actually sound quite convincing as female, even in such a low range. Believe me, many women (and I mean young healthy women, non-smokers, with no breathing issues) do speak in such range, they are usually contraltos.
Anyways, I know I am getting a bit technical here and most if not everybody did not go this far or just fell asleep or went somewhere else.
But for anyone interested, again let me point you to the useful Note/Octave-Hertz conversion chart I uploaded to share with you all, for all of those who speak only the "Hertz" language, which seems to be also used mostly by voice surgeons, as opposed to musical note and octave.
http://i.imgbox.com/OTTxMvJs.jpgI have been practicing with the Kathe Perez voice feminization method. As many others, they insist that our aim should be an average A3. But this is a NATURAL average only for a person who was born a high tenor or tenorino, that is, a male with a voice break at A4 or A#4. --A very small percentage of birth males are born with this voice type.
Me for example, I am not sure if I break on F#4 or G4, that is, I may be a dramatic or a lyric-dramatic tenor, which are the lowest registers for a tenor voice, approaching a baritone.
This means that FOR ME, a NATURAL-SOUNDING "authentic" female voice after lots of voice training, CAN ONLY BE one with an average note between F#3 and G3. So my NATURAL-SOUNDING female voice can only be in a range between E3 and C4 or F3 and C#4. I have recorded myself tons of times and believe me, when I manage to eliminate most of my male resonance and breathiness and get a clear voice, THAT IS my best voice range, BY FAR. If I go any lower, I sound like an androgynous guy, or like a regular guy. But if I go any higher, which is not difficult for me at all, I sound soooo fake, pathetic, false and "gay", I mean, like a man trying to sound like a woman. So believe me, HIGHER DOES NOT MEAN BETTER!!! It is the resonance and the forced breathiness what one has to ALWAYS have in check. But hey, that's only my opinion, I over-analyze things!
Cheers
Bibi B.