A 19-year-old young man asks: Am I a tenor?
Saturday, April 18th, 2009Hey I’m a 19 year old boy, and I only started playing guitar and piano last year but it turns out it came really naturally to me and I’m really good at them both now. So naturally, Ive also started seriously trying to sing for the past like 8 months. More recently I have been a lot more into it, and really trying to work on my vocal range. I think I sound pretty good, but obviously with my lack of experience I can’t be too good. I can sing from a range of about a low A to a high D fairly comfortably, and I often use a high E but only as the very top notes in some songs. I love doing covers of popular songs, but most songs don’t sound that good when I transpose them so much lower to within my range… I’m hoping that if I keep practicing I can some day be able to hit a high G. it’s a big goal but I can already hit an F if I really try. Does this range classify me as a tenor? and do you think that this is a reachable goal to be able to sing that high or maybe even higher? I will probably seek some vocal lessons but I don’t have much money to do so so any advice you have would be appreciated!
ANSWER: Hello Aaron,
The range “low A to a high D” and occasionally E, F and G – does not qualify you as a tenor – yet. At 19 your voice is very much in the process of development and your mature-voice classification remains to be discovered. A to A (two octaves) or G or G (two octaves) is “baritone”. Aaron, if and when you study voice – do so with a REAL voice teacher, and not someone who will promise the sky or tell you that s/he’ll “turn you into a tenor” (a quack). You are made what you are – and a bass cannot make himself into a tenor or vice-versa. It would be well to accept where your voice lies in range and comfort level – and sing there with freedom, expressively for the rest of your life, rather than shoot for a preconceived notion of what you’d like to become – even if you’re not made that way. Please understand, I’m saying this for your good – not to side-swipe you or deflate you. You will sing best in the range where you experience stamina most and the most comfort. One does not BECOME a tenor because of a decision, one discovers the parameters of one’s voice, develops it to its potential – and sings there.
My recommendation is: get involved in any of the choral ensembles that use male voices – and plug into something that will help the development of your voice and musical abilities. You can likely join a college ensemble that will challenge you musically while at the same time become a useful tool in the development of your voice. Ask around to find out if the director (conductor) of the ensemble is astute as a vocalist.
There’s my advice. I wish you success.