Quote from: Dena on September 25, 2015, 02:54:45 PM
Lowest usable note 80Hz, male speaking voice was above that.
Mouth voice 130-196Hz
Thats about the same stats that I had before the VFS actually! My lowest possible was 82 Hz and my by then regular voice was my mouth voice which Dr Kim measured to be 134 Hz.
I tried to do a male voice recording once and I believe it came close, the average frequency on it was 110 Hz.
This is low - very low, basically a bass or bass-baritone voice, but it is not extreme. So I would imagine that your voice is in that sense similar to mine, maybe a 100-110 Hz chest voice, (male range is 100-150 Hz, so its really the lower end, but not outside of it).
post op, I guess my normal (mouth) voice is about 180 Hz now - sometimes 175, sometimes 195 on average. I believe chest voice is rather broken - but I believe if I go to 130-150 Hz I still can do some chest voice and if I go down to 115 Hz there is probably chest resonance involved some more - but I kind of tried to unlearn doing chest resonance such a long time ago that I dont think I can do it properly and rather not do it, not to wake sleeping dogs...
QuoteBack when I was in speech therapy, I worked with magnetic tape and I don't know if I ever recorded a before voice but I may have to see if I have one I didn't record over.
That would be cool. I also have no recordings of a "male voice" of mine. I remember it was one of the lowest in school - comparing it to boys... To me this kind of justifies me getting the surgery since with it I am now at least in an alto female range, which is still low, but ok...
With voice therapy however, I managed to get a pretty great pitch range, so at least that was not an issue in my case, more a mental one of using the range I was able to access .