His one video of him in the studio only is amazing. He has the lowest note that even elephants who hear low sounds and he hits them. He also had to do a bass part for an orchestra that an instrument couldn't hit. He's such a wonderful spirited man.
I have got to check out his INFRA sound and more of his speaking voice, too. There is something about that low low low stuff makes me warm all over, nearly as well as the sound of the cars at the races! Love those deep in my chest hearing those deep sounds. Phew!
i managed to hit a c1 in chest voice plus or minus around 50 cents, it was super inconsistent because i'm untrained, but i can also hit e#7 in whistle register consistently and without straining (i think, it's hard to tell in my whistle register)
I'm not taking anything away from Tim he hits some fantastic low notes but tbh he's not doing anything that JD Sumner didn't do way back in 1966 when he entered the Guiness book of records way back in 1966 with Blessed Assurance hitting a double low C Tim hasn't done anything that JD has done already and better IMHO. Tim would say himself that JD was the bench mark that all low Bass singers try to match.
The G-7 thing seems kinda bs to me. He struggles at the 0th octave so seven octaves down seems extreme. I wouldnt say guinness is a perfect source but I think it must have been a genuine mistake on there hand. Not sure, just speculation.
Yeah he's been recorded able to produce a note at G-7. A lot of people moan that they don't really post videos of him singing that note, the main issue is that the human ear cannot hear below 20hz. G-7 is 0.187hz. So you would be posting a video of him singing a note that is literally inaudible.
@@Jonesykins, agreed, I have done a sustained Eb0 subharmonic and I had to use software to even know I hit the right pitch. I could hear it, but couldn't, per se... most humans can discern a sound down to about 12Hz, but really hearing the pitch accurately, no.
The American singer Tim Storms obtained the Guinness record for the lowest note in 2012, which reached a G-7 or 0.189 Hz. And since then no one has managed to beat him. 0.189Hz is a bit of its cords in is troat every 18.9 seconds.
Impressive that he can hit those low notes. But he is not someone I would enjoy listening to. He sounds like he is burping low a lot of the times. I'll take Tim Foust's voice any day or even Avi Kaplan.
@@chrisenglert3958, 100%! Tim Storms does have a good voice, until he drops down below G1 or so... then it sounds bad, in my opinion. I have heard him live at Branson, and his upper range is actually pretty good (he can reach nearly as high as Geoff Castellucci and Tim Foust). Just when Storms uses glottal compression (a technique bass singers use to maintain volume in their lower chest voice), he doesn't sound so good.
Just wanna share my notes: Chest range D4-F1 Subharmonics D2-G0 Fry notes (somewhere to D0, they are hard to count because i dont have a proper technology or even a good mic at home) I’m a fresh 16 year old