@@deakyfics8985 You know how subharmonics is produced, right ? Right ? ---- She's explained why he sounds gritty in the lows ( 3:12 ), and she's absolutely right that he sometimes uses fry not just for subharmonics, but for embellishment at the start of phrases ( 2:41 is one example, 2:45 is another : " *where* ever I wander, *where* ever I roam"). If it sounds like subharmonics, I have news folks, it's because subharmonics *is* fry. She's demonstrated fry too. If she just tried to have just a tiny bit more chord closure she would pop into subharmonics, even if just for half a second. I don't know what everyone is actually discussing, in this thread or any of the others. She knows what she's talking about, she's right about it, she just seems to be a stranger to the concept and practice of subharmonics, but that's it. But people need to realize that subharmonics as it's most commonly known is a form of fry.
@@lonewaer " Subharmonics is fry" Regarding this, I have to mention that there are many different opinions of whether fry and subharmonics is the same. Most I have seen say they are completely different registers. Not saying you're wrong, both subharmonics and fry are not modal ,but the sound produced by subharmonics and fry is different. In subharmonics you layer the fry with chest voice . Fry on the other hand is just fry alone. Fry is much more naturally occurring phenomenon than subharmonics Hence people practice and practice to finally get subharmonics . You could say that subharmonic has fry, but if you're saying they are the same, not many people will agree with you on that. Also check this out th-cam.com/video/DbKJ2E7YCNg/w-d-xo.html.
@@lonewaer I'm not sure subharmonics are fry. They're the false cords. They naturally produce a tone an octave below regular so challenge is to close those while keeping the regular cords out of it where possible. They dirty the sound. That's how I understand it though of course I'm not looking into my own throat when I'm doing them 😊
@@reubenthomas7907 If you have a look at a spectrometer subharmonics drop the main pitch entirely. It's not layered onto the chest voice pitch that goes entirely. Apologies if I am misunderstanding you or being pedantic.
As a low baritone I really enjoy when bass and lower baritone singers get some headlight. Makes me challange my own voice a bit as well and try to get lower. Both Avi Kaplan and Tim Faust have awesome solo music as well that I think you should have a lotsen too ^^
@@Ptxlive Was a while since I sang but when I tried now (Had to find an online piano to check what note it was) it was a D2 quite comfortably. I can go lower but D2 is around the lower point just of the bat. At least I think that is a low baritone, my old choire leader use to say that at least but then I also sang in the lower tenors some times. But voice has changed again since then.
If you’re a baritone you can play with subharmonics and fry to learn your lower range. About 10 months ago I was playing with my fry and what I did was go into what I thought was my lowest note and then let it come apart into fry. I then increased the air pressure using my abdominals to “push” the individual bleats back together until they made a note. A bunch of things happened. Firstly I learned how to super relax my vocal cords and get into lower chest notes. Secondly I discovered subharmonics. I can go between chest and subharmonics and back again on the same note. If I switch into subharmonics I can get down to a B1 comfortably and if I sit there and work it I can go much lower than that. In isolation I can get the subharmonic G1 but doing it dynamically in a song isn’t something I have mastered yet. I can’t count the number of times I’ve sung along to this song to my baby daughter and tried to hit that G1. It has happened but not often. The other strange thing that happened from doing that exercise was I got some upper range extension from it. That’s an odd thing, or so I thought but my voice coach says it’s because you’re training your vocal cord closure which gives you both that gritty bleat and the ping in the upper range.
He uses subharmonics a lot and growl occasionally, don't think he ever uses vocal fry though. What you hear in this song is almost assuredly 100% chest voice. He's probably got the deepest chest voice I've ever heard with the exception of Tim Foust. The trade-off is that Geoff's higher range sounds much more pleasing imo. That said, with incredibly cool tricks like subharmonics and growl they can all blow out subwoofers lol.
@@DrippCyplex Most of these vocal coaches dont know shit about basses. Calling Tim Foust a Basso profondo, C'mon( someone else had done this not this vocal coach). Not saying all vocal coaches dont know what subharmonics are, but most of them don't know what they are.( and there's a good chance this one doesnt know it).
📖 Get your signed copy of my album Fable here: www.bethroars.com/shop ☀ Pre-save my first single "Power Of The Wolf" 🐺 on Spotify (it really helps me out!): distrokid.com/hyperfollow/bethroars/power-of-the-wolf 🥁 Become a Patreon Supporter: www.patreon.com/bethroars
I loved this cover. He was obviously having a good time with it which made it all the more enjoyable. I love hearing him do those subharmonic notes because the other two we all know generally use growl to do it and it doesn't give as clean a sound to my ear.
When I was in college, working as a computer lab assistant, I was in my boss’ office one day when she had a radio on. I think it was either the Oak Ridge Boys or the Statler Brothers, and I was singing along with them. When I matched the bass dropping an octave below what was already low, her jaw almost left a divot in the floor!
i think his vocal cords are awash with testosterone.....he credits Tim Faust for teaching him to get lower....Tim will make you swoon....all Voiceplay and Homefree are superb
This entire video was one giant flex with Geoff using the colored squares to let everyone know he has a natural 5-octave range. You can hear his vocal fry and subharmonic technique on display in those other How-To Sing Low videos, but also on the end note in Oogie Boogie's Song.
Per his vid in 2019- He is using the growl technique. I tripped across the technique this week via a belch(My phone is listening to my out loud thoughts). When you clear your throat or belch and push out a note or sound your vocal cords are highly relaxed. He simply learned to control that to hit the low notes with power.
I would love an analysis of John Garcia, no one sounds like him, he has a really unique voice. Songs like Thumb, Supa Scoopa and Mighty Scoop (Kyuss), or If Only Two (Unida) are great examples of his skils
At Christmas you often hear folks trying to show off their high range singing O Holy Night. But I much prefer that song sung in a low range. I much prefer the richness.
If you want to hear even bassier basses i recommend everybody classified as "basso profundo". For example JD Sumner (I've Got To Walk That Lonesome Road), also Ivan Rebroff ("Im tiefen Keller", He goes down to F1 and also goes really high).
I doubt this will ever happen but I would love to see your reaction to a true basso profundo, especially a Russian oktavist. Vladimir Pasjukov had one of the warmest, smoothest deep bass voices I have ever heard and was able project it over a huge choir without amplification despite singing in the contra octave in chest voice. Very, very few singers can do this with any volume, which is why you see most bass singers eating the microphone on their lowest notes. His performance with the St. Petersburg Chamber Choir ( th-cam.com/video/pI8qFWQa4YQ/w-d-xo.html ) is a classic and illustrates exactly what I am talking about. He was also in high demand as a soloist for Russian sacred music that called for extremely low bass.
I want a bass-off! Who has the lowest bass between this guy Tim Frost from Home Free Avi Kaplan of Pentatonix and the OG bass Richard Sterban form the Oakridge Boys.
Colter Wall is an amazing voice with depth. Please please check him out. Anything live cause you have to see it to believe it but probably still won’t believe it.
Blackbriar - Arms of the Ocean (Acoustic)[Live] I love how you analyze these voices and let me learn how they work at the same time :) I KNOW you would love this song!! Honestly, they are SO underrated and I love this song so much. It's my birthday tomorrow, pretty please 🥺 I'd love to see your reaction
Im not sure if you know about this, but thats not "grit" hes using another set of vocal chords that are pitched an octave lower, its called sub-harmonic singing
Please do 1916 or Don't Let Daddy Kiss Me by Motorhead - it shows a very profound side to Lemmy that the average person simply won't see past all the black leather and cigarette smoke.
I also did not hear any vocal fry in this performance...and wouldn't expect to as most low basses can sing down to at least D2 before fry tones become necessary or helpful for going lower. The most remarkable thing about Castellucci's voice in comparison to most basses is his registration. When singing the melody in his mid- voice, you would swear that he's a baritone. It's not until he get's below A2 that there's any indication that that's not the case. He can also do a credible imitation of a tenor without going into falsetto. While he has a low voice, it is also quite a light, lyrical and flexible voice and that's what makes him such a chameleon of vocal register (at least if he's singing into a microphone; a lot of these tricks don't really work in acoustic performance). Most basses sound like low basses from top to bottom with a less marked distinction of register.
My vocal range is from E2 (D2 if I try really hard, but I'm barely able to sing with D2 or D#2. F2 is most comfortable.) to about A3 with chest and F4/F#4 with head voice. D5 if I really go up the volume. That's not comfortable at all. How do I get better?
Fun fact, Geoff doesn't even consider himself a "true bass", but a "baritone with a bass range"... he said so publicly on his channel: th-cam.com/video/sVGFTMb_3ns/w-d-xo.html
Hi Beth. Geoff is confusing to me because he says he is not a bass singer but a baritone singing bass. Many baritones are pressed into service to sing bass because there are nor many of them but this was very surprising. See where he says this at 0:30 th-cam.com/video/sVGFTMb_3ns/w-d-xo.html
I notice he sort of 'sings through his teeth' a lot. Is that just a stylistic thing because he's trying to smile while singing, or does it serve some purpose?
This appears to be the last saved reaction to an a cappella performance; so, I am leaving my suggestion here. Want to hear a perfect a cappella rendition by a 7-year-old? If so, then listen to ‘I’m A Fool To Want You’: th-cam.com/video/LXknLZDoRVQ/w-d-xo.html
I want to hear Vocal Play do a version of The Song of the Volga Boatmen. Learning Russian is probably out of the question but there is an english version and the syllables mostly line up. th-cam.com/video/4_ug10fHZLw/w-d-xo.html
fun fact: he was not using vocal fry
yeah i noticed a lot of react channels say he’s using fry to reach those lower notes when he really doesn’t need it 😂
@@trevbenitez Serious? omg it's clearly not fry
Geoff uses subharmonics for many of his really low notes.
chopstix396 yes I know 🤦♂️she said he was using fry when it was chest
This is usually why I don't watch voice teachers react to Bass covers.
The gritty sound isn’t from vocal fry, it’s how slow his vocal chords are vibrating and you can hear some space in between in notes like his contra G
Yup, it isn't vocal fry, is just chest, and he did a sub-harmonic G1 at second 19 of his video
@@deakyfics8985 You know how subharmonics is produced, right ? Right ?
----
She's explained why he sounds gritty in the lows ( 3:12 ), and she's absolutely right that he sometimes uses fry not just for subharmonics, but for embellishment at the start of phrases ( 2:41 is one example, 2:45 is another : " *where* ever I wander, *where* ever I roam"). If it sounds like subharmonics, I have news folks, it's because subharmonics *is* fry. She's demonstrated fry too. If she just tried to have just a tiny bit more chord closure she would pop into subharmonics, even if just for half a second. I don't know what everyone is actually discussing, in this thread or any of the others. She knows what she's talking about, she's right about it, she just seems to be a stranger to the concept and practice of subharmonics, but that's it. But people need to realize that subharmonics as it's most commonly known is a form of fry.
@@lonewaer " Subharmonics is fry"
Regarding this, I have to mention that there are many different opinions of whether fry and subharmonics is the same. Most I have seen say they are completely different registers. Not saying you're wrong, both subharmonics and fry are not modal ,but the sound produced by subharmonics and fry is different. In subharmonics you layer the fry with chest voice . Fry on the other hand is just fry alone. Fry is much more naturally occurring phenomenon than subharmonics
Hence people practice and practice to finally get subharmonics .
You could say that subharmonic has fry, but if you're saying they are the same, not many people will agree with you on that. Also check this out th-cam.com/video/DbKJ2E7YCNg/w-d-xo.html.
@@lonewaer I'm not sure subharmonics are fry. They're the false cords. They naturally produce a tone an octave below regular so challenge is to close those while keeping the regular cords out of it where possible. They dirty the sound.
That's how I understand it though of course I'm not looking into my own throat when I'm doing them 😊
@@reubenthomas7907 If you have a look at a spectrometer subharmonics drop the main pitch entirely. It's not layered onto the chest voice pitch that goes entirely.
Apologies if I am misunderstanding you or being pedantic.
As a low baritone I really enjoy when bass and lower baritone singers get some headlight. Makes me challange my own voice a bit as well and try to get lower.
Both Avi Kaplan and Tim Faust have awesome solo music as well that I think you should have a lotsen too ^^
(Sorry) Foust*
Jargien hi, just curious, as a low baritone, what’s your lowest comfortable note?
@@Ptxlive Was a while since I sang but when I tried now (Had to find an online piano to check what note it was) it was a D2 quite comfortably. I can go lower but D2 is around the lower point just of the bat.
At least I think that is a low baritone, my old choire leader use to say that at least but then I also sang in the lower tenors some times. But voice has changed again since then.
If you’re a baritone you can play with subharmonics and fry to learn your lower range. About 10 months ago I was playing with my fry and what I did was go into what I thought was my lowest note and then let it come apart into fry. I then increased the air pressure using my abdominals to “push” the individual bleats back together until they made a note.
A bunch of things happened. Firstly I learned how to super relax my vocal cords and get into lower chest notes. Secondly I discovered subharmonics. I can go between chest and subharmonics and back again on the same note. If I switch into subharmonics I can get down to a B1 comfortably and if I sit there and work it I can go much lower than that. In isolation I can get the subharmonic G1 but doing it dynamically in a song isn’t something I have mastered yet.
I can’t count the number of times I’ve sung along to this song to my baby daughter and tried to hit that G1. It has happened but not often.
The other strange thing that happened from doing that exercise was I got some upper range extension from it. That’s an odd thing, or so I thought but my voice coach says it’s because you’re training your vocal cord closure which gives you both that gritty bleat and the ping in the upper range.
He uses subharmonics a lot and growl occasionally, don't think he ever uses vocal fry though. What you hear in this song is almost assuredly 100% chest voice. He's probably got the deepest chest voice I've ever heard with the exception of Tim Foust. The trade-off is that Geoff's higher range sounds much more pleasing imo. That said, with incredibly cool tricks like subharmonics and growl they can all blow out subwoofers lol.
you have no idea how happy i was to see this in my reccomended i think i requested it a month ago
oh it was you! lol
NO vocal fry in this. Only chest voice.
And subharmonics
@@joefran2513 Yeah, true. But Im sure she didnt catch the layered subharmonic G1. And she probably doesnt know what is subharmonics.
@@reubenthomas7907 True, true
@@reubenthomas7907 I doubt that a vocal coach doesnt know what subharmonics is.
@@DrippCyplex Most of these vocal coaches dont know shit about basses. Calling Tim Foust a Basso profondo, C'mon( someone else had done this not this vocal coach). Not saying all vocal coaches dont know what subharmonics are, but most of them don't know what they are.( and there's a good chance this one doesnt know it).
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Take a look at Geoff Castellucci’s version of the headless horseman song! It’s getting more and more views each day, the man is unreal
I loved this cover. He was obviously having a good time with it which made it all the more enjoyable. I love hearing him do those subharmonic notes because the other two we all know generally use growl to do it and it doesn't give as clean a sound to my ear.
being a bass singer at gatherings gets you noticed. it's fun times around the fire
When I was in college, working as a computer lab assistant, I was in my boss’ office one day when she had a radio on. I think it was either the Oak Ridge Boys or the Statler Brothers, and I was singing along with them. When I matched the bass dropping an octave below what was already low, her jaw almost left a divot in the floor!
"the bassiest bass of all the bass" JD sumner wants to speak with you 😂
Also Geoff doesn't fry here :)
JD lowest note is a c0 right ? just asking because Geoff can hit a c#0 so they actually have a similar low range
Pedro Tenorio where have u heard about geoff hitting a c#0?
@@Kenny...... th-cam.com/video/U_l8P7is4Aw/w-d-xo.html here (i don´t know if it´s true)
@@pedrotenorio3155 JD's lowest note is a G0 in chest voice, Geoff is a brilliant singer but he can't come close to that
@@Slamthulhu oh, J.D is a wonderful bass, thank you 🙃
I love your enthusiasm and appreciate you pointing out all the little nuances in the songs. By the way, loving the blouse.
this isn't a bass thing...it's a seismic event!
11am and I just got up and what a way to wake up to you and this awesome video. Have a great day. Love ya Beth. Xx 💖
Jeoff is amazing! He's worked hard to get to where he is; it take a lot!
Love this one so much! 🎶❤️
i think his vocal cords are awash with testosterone.....he credits Tim Faust for teaching him to get lower....Tim will make you swoon....all Voiceplay and Homefree are superb
I'm so happy you checked this put love your vids!
This entire video was one giant flex with Geoff using the colored squares to let everyone know he has a natural 5-octave range.
You can hear his vocal fry and subharmonic technique on display in those other How-To Sing Low videos, but also on the end note in Oogie Boogie's Song.
Haychess. HA!
Edit: 2:09 is the face of pure joy.
oh my goooooood that accent is EVERYTHING!!!! reminds me alot of Merida ❤❤❤❤
Per his vid in 2019- He is using the growl technique. I tripped across the technique this week via a belch(My phone is listening to my out loud thoughts). When you clear your throat or belch and push out a note or sound your vocal cords are highly relaxed. He simply learned to control that to hit the low notes with power.
his new cover of Tennessee Ernie Ford's 16 tons is amazingly cool
Geoff's production style in this reminds me so much of Nick Pitera's one man Tributes
One of his best
This one hits right in the nostalgia for me because my childhood favorite Disney movie was always The Jungle Book.
its not vocal fry i know what vocal fry feels and sounds like down low and that is most definitely full chest.
You can use vocal fry almost anywhere in your range except up high.
i was sat like a child with this song
I would love an analysis of John Garcia, no one sounds like him, he has a really unique voice. Songs like Thumb, Supa Scoopa and Mighty Scoop (Kyuss), or If Only Two (Unida) are great examples of his skils
At Christmas you often hear folks trying to show off their high range singing O Holy Night. But I much prefer that song sung in a low range. I much prefer the richness.
I absolutely love your British accent!
Oh 😯. Still love it.
Scotland is a part of Great Britain isn't it? So it's still a British accent. If she said it's an English accent… Then you can correct her.
Well I never said anything about “who they like”… I was asking about them being part of Great Britain…
I have seen Beth herself referred to herself as “we BRITs”. So your fear mongering has no place here.
@Phil Stehle Phil!! Don't be butthurt about what we think bro 😂 regardless of where she's from
Geoff used to sing tenor as a young man but has spent 20 years training his voice to sing very low. He has made videos explaining how to do it.
She knows just enough about bass singing to be wrong about pretty much everything she says
Any chance of seeing you featuring his take on sixteen tons or blackbird?
I never clicked on a video so quickly
Geoff's version of "16 Tons" is amazing.
If you want to hear even bassier basses i recommend everybody classified as "basso profundo". For example JD Sumner (I've Got To Walk That Lonesome Road), also Ivan Rebroff ("Im tiefen Keller", He goes down to F1 and also goes really high).
Good morning from Costa Rica, greetings a great video 🍃 👌
Looking lovely as always Beth
He does use vocal fry but only as accentuation not to get lower
Who has more of a bass between him and Tim Foust?
Geoff placed Tim above him always 😁
I doubt this will ever happen but I would love to see your reaction to a true basso profundo, especially a Russian oktavist. Vladimir Pasjukov had one of the warmest, smoothest deep bass voices I have ever heard and was able project it over a huge choir without amplification despite singing in the contra octave in chest voice. Very, very few singers can do this with any volume, which is why you see most bass singers eating the microphone on their lowest notes.
His performance with the St. Petersburg Chamber Choir ( th-cam.com/video/pI8qFWQa4YQ/w-d-xo.html ) is a classic and illustrates exactly what I am talking about. He was also in high demand as a soloist for Russian sacred music that called for extremely low bass.
I want a bass-off! Who has the lowest bass between this guy Tim Frost from Home Free Avi Kaplan of Pentatonix and the OG bass Richard Sterban form the Oakridge Boys.
Have you heard his cover of Tennessee Ernie Ford's "Sixteen Tons"?
Colter Wall is an amazing voice with depth. Please please check him out. Anything live cause you have to see it to believe it but probably still won’t believe it.
People like him are obviously Mariah Carey or Morissette but reversed. 4-5 octaves going up, hes 4-5 octaves going doooooowwwnnn
If you want low notes, check out "ALPHA STREAM - Tim Storms - Lonesome Road". He only has the world record low note at G -7.
Please react voiceplay's 'thinkin bout you'
Nobody did it and I want it sooo much
He uses his chest voice to get that low
you know every one is talking about Dimash's 6 octave vocal range... and it is amazing... but Jeff has quite a range himself.. he is not far behind
Blackbriar - Arms of the Ocean (Acoustic)[Live]
I love how you analyze these voices and let me learn how they work at the same time :)
I KNOW you would love this song!! Honestly, they are SO underrated and I love this song so much. It's my birthday tomorrow, pretty please 🥺 I'd love to see your reaction
Geoff and Tim Faust not only have the lowest voices around they both have 5+ octave range.
Amazing performance and reaction!
Yay beth reacted to this
Im not sure if you know about this, but thats not "grit" hes using another set of vocal chords that are pitched an octave lower, its called sub-harmonic singing
I'm a bass but I can't play anything and like you say it's impossible to find bass backing tracks for rock and pop and my singing exams are hell.
Please do 1916 or Don't Let Daddy Kiss Me by Motorhead - it shows a very profound side to Lemmy that the average person simply won't see past all the black leather and cigarette smoke.
I also did not hear any vocal fry in this performance...and wouldn't expect to as most low basses can sing down to at least D2 before fry tones become necessary or helpful for going lower. The most remarkable thing about Castellucci's voice in comparison to most basses is his registration. When singing the melody in his mid- voice, you would swear that he's a baritone. It's not until he get's below A2 that there's any indication that that's not the case. He can also do a credible imitation of a tenor without going into falsetto. While he has a low voice, it is also quite a light, lyrical and flexible voice and that's what makes him such a chameleon of vocal register (at least if he's singing into a microphone; a lot of these tricks don't really work in acoustic performance). Most basses sound like low basses from top to bottom with a less marked distinction of register.
U should listen and analyze Alex terrible from Slaughter to prevail demolisher
My vocal range is from E2 (D2 if I try really hard, but I'm barely able to sing with D2 or D#2. F2 is most comfortable.) to about A3 with chest and F4/F#4 with head voice. D5 if I really go up the volume. That's not comfortable at all. How do I get better?
I've heard a few basses, including Geoff, say that working on your higher notes also helps to extend your lower ones.
I'd like to hear you react to an opera singer
Please please please consider reacting to The Bridge City Sinners!
Fun fact, Geoff doesn't even consider himself a "true bass", but a "baritone with a bass range"... he said so publicly on his channel: th-cam.com/video/sVGFTMb_3ns/w-d-xo.html
Hi Beth. Geoff is confusing to me because he says he is not a bass singer but a baritone singing bass. Many baritones are pressed into service to sing bass because there are nor many of them but this was very surprising. See where he says this at 0:30
th-cam.com/video/sVGFTMb_3ns/w-d-xo.html
@2:32 "his vocal cords are thicker than most people's butt"
Hey do a reaction of Just Sing - voiceplay.
What is Beth's accent
Your outfit is great.
He doesn’t blink
Beautiful reaction Beth
Melody Cristea: LILIAC - MARS (Original) (Live in Cumming, GA 2019)
Beth, do Geoff Castalucci, Blackbird
I would love to hear your thoughts on "Keep Your Hands to Yourself" by Georgia Satellites
I feel he is often “nasal-y”. Am I wrong? Would love a reaction to his version of 16 Tons.
Well well, another I somehow missed!
Someone should make a version with trombones, Wagner tubas and contrabass tuba!
Can you do a video on Zolo Jesus
I notice he sort of 'sings through his teeth' a lot. Is that just a stylistic thing because he's trying to smile while singing, or does it serve some purpose?
He uses sub harmonica for most of his really low notes
He is using subharmonics in this song, isn't he? For example in the intro
vocalplay the phantom of the opera
Please react to the oogie boogie song from voiceplay you can also be amazed by Geoff castellucci his voice
This appears to be the last saved reaction to an a cappella performance; so, I am leaving my suggestion here. Want to hear a perfect a cappella rendition by a 7-year-old? If so, then listen to ‘I’m A Fool To Want You’: th-cam.com/video/LXknLZDoRVQ/w-d-xo.html
FXMLDR is a great song the singing is amazing ,
assista Crystal River Boys - Rainbow of Love [HD]
I believe the "bassiest bass of all basses" is in fact Vladimir Miller. Granted, he's cheating by being Russian. Great video as always!
there's definitely bassier basses than Vladimir
Mikhail Zlatopolsky, Vladimir Pasjukov...
@@matthewdockray9745 Vladmir Miller himself would be the first to tell that.
🙌🙌👍🥰
Check out Home Free, Flowers on the Wall.
You should do Mike love "we're gonna make it" sugarshack sessions version
He wasn’t really doing a fry he’s really doing a note call a subharmonic note
How about a reaction for Avi Kaplan change on the rise
Never mind you already did it! Haha
No Fry, all chest and some subharmonics
It's his chest voice.
How have none of the TH-cam voice coaches done the Trololo guy?
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eduard_Khil
I want to hear Vocal Play do a version of The Song of the Volga Boatmen.
Learning Russian is probably out of the question but there is an english version and the syllables mostly line up.
th-cam.com/video/4_ug10fHZLw/w-d-xo.html
Please do a reaction to Gerry Cinnamon - live from trnsmt festival the guy is amazing
And what is a hatche?? Do you mean H??
Please react to Hows the Heart the ACOUSTIC version by Floor amazing
Nice 😽😽😽😽
you should react FUKI amazing voice at unlucky morpheus
Please react "ISYANA - UNLOCK THE KEY"