I'm incredibly familiar with his voice since I've heard most of his work and I can safely say that Patton is totally and 110% not a tenor, he's quite an ordinary high baritone with a strong high range and a brilliant technique... The rest I can agree with, Cab Calloway's lower note is mindblowing. Cool video idea
Songs where Lord Crobath is singing are pretty hard to find. The song where he is singing C2s is a song called "17 Vuotta", which means "17 Years". By the way he lives in my country.
@@FloridianBarit0ne Yeah! I know but when I try to go to his Range Planet thread it just says "You do not have permission to access this page." I still remember something from there.
Thanks for putting me in the video! I am not really a tenor though, if id sing opera, my "proper" range would be A2-A4, which is kind of high baritone/baritenor region
Peter Hollens is insanely good!? Could almost pass as a bass in a choir. Which is crazy caus his high notes are so light. Also I would call Mike Patton a baritone rather than tenor
Patton is 110% a high baritone yes, listen to "The Christmas Song". He's got a brilliant technique though, he can sing quasi-tenor quite well when he wants to but his natural placement is that of a typical high baritone. People underestimate the capabilities of a technically capable high baritone, they can get a very quasi-tenor sound in contemporary music both in terms of tone and range.
Not true. Casper does not consistently have that range. All his first octave notes are achieved by drinking alcohol and recording low notes the next morning. Michael Spyres and Mike Patton have the lowest consistent range, with Spyres having a loud C2 and Patton having live first octave notes down to A1.
A singer who uses Fry to hit bass notes is fine as long as it's done expertly, I'm thinking Ken Turner here the great Gospel bass singer with the Dixie Echoes and Blackwood Bros, his Fry notes which can take him down to a low Eb1 and lower is beyond normal even JD was impressed but was hesitant at fully endorsing it as a proper musical note and of course he was right in saying that.
@@Definitelycreated Talk about a lot of misinformation in a single comment, dear lord where do we even start with this mess of a thing. Out of those names, only Tony Kakko is a true tenor and even he is a very low-placed one. Arthur Brown, John Lennon and Patton are all quite typical high baritones in different flavours, it's amazing how conservative and outdated people's views on the high baritones still are in 2024 when we've got endless evidence of them being able to sing high incredibly well and covering a lot of ground. Headache-inducing comment