#what voice type?

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weak wharf
lusty delta
# weak wharf can someone tell me what type is my voice based on my lowest and highest note he...

Before anything, what I’m going to say is just a based assumption, and should really only be used trivially.

You’re most likely a baritone, just based off your qualities in your extremes.

Your lows, though extend low, lacks darkness that is shown in true basses. For your upper region, it lacks the natural resonance seen in tenors, though this may be due to lack of training.

This would imply, that your voice has a natural rich quality in the mids associated with baritones.

Unless you plan on going to classical singing or broadway, this is essentially just trivial information. Again it’s a based assumption and if you do care that much, it’s best to have a professional vocal teacher analyze, as it’s an entire process.

weak wharf
lusty delta
# weak wharf The reason why i asked is because im worrying if i can be able to sing close to ...

You don’t really need to worry too much about range right now, which is expandable but often takes a long time. Months to a year to expand upwards of your functional range for 1-3 semi-tones, and years to expand your tessitura (the range where you’re most comfortable singing, full-voice).

What’s best is to focus on having solid fundamentals. I’m talking tone quality, breath control, pitch accuracy, rhythm, resonance, diction, posture. Essentially, healthily sounding good.

In the end, voice types are just a way to describe your voice characteristics, which becomes essentially trivial information in pop.

Being a baritone simply implies you’re stronger and more comfortable at the relative midrange, where you’re best at.
It doesn’t imply you can’t sing higher, which comes from proper technique, and conditioning. It just means it will naturally be harder to sing in the upper region compared to tenors, with similar quality. Even then, if it’s just karaoke or writing your own music, you can just adjust the key ti your voice, which is commonly done in music.

lost ledge