I love watching your Voiceplay/Geoff videos. I watch them all twice, first with no subtitles so I can enjoy your facial reaction & then with subtitles to see what you thought! Everything on Geoff's channel is great but I highly recommend his newest The Sound of Silence. Also if you haven't watched Far Over the Misty Mountain you might need a fair few pauses!!
About three yearsago, a friend sent me a link to this video. I have been hooked on Geoff and Voiceplay ever since. If you check the credits, you will find that he does it all, with his wife Kathy. He is truly amazing!!!! He has a new one coming on April 14.
Gabriela, I'm 71 years old and remember bass singer Tennessee Ernie Ford when he sang this. In all my years I have never heard bass like this, TEF couldn't get that low. Another coal mining song Geoff sings Big Bad John is one you may want to hear.
Geoff and his acapella group VoicePlay (formerly known as 4to5) have been around a long time. But he only started doing solo music vids during the COVID restrictions. He also has spoken vids (like Edgar Allan Poe) on there. And he posted some vids on how he developed his lower voice range. You're right... it was a lot of practice and a lot of pain. He uses a combination of growl, vocal fry and subharmonics. The growl technique... which he learned from his friend Tim Foust, the bass for Home Free... is basically just clearing your throat on pitch. Subharmonics means you somehow tell your vocal cords to alternate between strong and weak vibrations. That way, if you sing an E2 for instance, it sounds like an E1. The song Sixteen Tons came out in 1947. But the most famous version was released by "Tennessee" Ernie Ford in 1958. It's about the 19th and 20th century practices of mining companies. Building a whole village next to the mine, with private homes, stores, a school, everything. Besides the provided housing, the miners were paid wages, but in private script instead of real money. That meant they could only spend it at the Company Store where everything was a fixed price. The guy in the song is working as hard as he can, but he keeps falling further behind. Anyway... If you react to music by the acapella groups VoicePlay, Home Free, and Pentatonix, and to solo vids by their individual current or former members, you'll pick up a lot of English-language subscribers and will have enough material to last you for a couple of years even if you do vids every day. Have fun.
Pretty sure you will LOVE his cover of Elvis' Way Down. It's pretty funny, he uses his "back up trio" for comedy...still beautiful, but ALSO silly. Pay attention to their name tags.
Bonjour, je trouve que vous avez une bonne analyse des vidéos. Vous êtes lucide et joyeuse. Merci Olá, eu acho que você tem uma boa análise de vídeos. Você está lúcido e alegre. Obrigado
Geoff is a super talented low bass singer, he can sing fairly high so all of the voices(parts) youre hearing are all Geoff! I love Geoff, but i prefer Tim Foust from the acapella group Home Free! Listen to Tim Foust and Peter Hollens sing Misty Mountains! Everyone in Home Free is super talented!
There aren't many men who can sing as deep as Geoff. One of the few who can is Tim Foust from the accapella group, Home Free. The Bass Gang is another good group if you love deep tones.
Essa è uma velha canção sobre a vida dos mineiros de carvão. Foi estrenada em 1946 por Merle Travis, e fala da condição dos mineiros, forçados a viverem em "cidades da mina". Eles eram pagados com bons que sò podiam-se gastar na loja da companhia mineira, assim que eram de fato escravos, pois nunca conseguiam pagar suas dividas à companhia que os exploitava até a morte. Se você quiser experimentar o Geoff em toda a sua extensão vocal, pode começar por "Far over the Misty Mountains cold", que faz parte da trilha sonora do filme "The Hobbit". Nesse video também ele è todos os personagens que se vêm, e canta todas as partes. Ou então pode ver a "Rains of Castamere", ou a "The sound of silence", ou "Ghost riders in the sky"... Ou talvez a "House of the Rising Sun". 🙂 Até a próxima!
I have a voice like this. And it is a gift from Dios, God,. And it all starts in your mother's belly when the male child receives testosterone. And when the male child receives alot of testosterone at birth. When he hits puberty, his voice deeps to be like James Earl Jones. And their vocal box develops to almost fill his whole through. And it gives people like Geoff the range of C4 to G1. You need to react to a song sung by Tim Foust, of Home Free, called, " Will You Still Love Me. I have that same range as Geoff Castellucci, Avi Kaplan, Tim Foust, and Josh Turner.
There is no filtering or editing. It is all coming from him. It is a gift from God that men like that can sing like that. And it's called subhamonics that allows a man like that to hit such low vocal notes. And he it able to have such range because his vocal box is 2.5 to 3 times bigger than a normal male vocalists. And that is because God gave him 3 times more testosterone because God wanted to enjoy hearing him sign for Him.
Geoff and his clones are using coal mining tools as instruments here. The song is a lament from a coal miner who is paid so little that he must borrow from his employer to aford to live. He feels that if he dies, he will not be able to go to Heaven, because he will have to pay his employers his soul to clear his debt.
It wasn’t so much “borrowing” from the company. Coal miners, up until it was banned in 1935, were paid with company script, which could only be spent at the Company store. The store charged outlandish prices for everything from milk and bread to meat and vegetables, etc., so the workers were perpetually in debt to the company. It was essentially a form of slavery.
Aeeeee alguém do Brasil reagiu ai meu favorito bass singer!!!!!!! 🎉🎉🎉🎉
I love watching your Voiceplay/Geoff videos. I watch them all twice, first with no subtitles so I can enjoy your facial reaction & then with subtitles to see what you thought! Everything on Geoff's channel is great but I highly recommend his newest The Sound of Silence. Also if you haven't watched Far Over the Misty Mountain you might need a fair few pauses!!
Thanks for watching the channel ❤. The indications are noted :)
Just discovered you. Thank goodness for google translate. You are a treasure! Love your reaction to Geoff's low notes. Thank you.
About three yearsago, a friend sent me a link to this video. I have been hooked on Geoff and Voiceplay ever since. If you check the credits, you will find that he does it all, with his wife Kathy. He is truly amazing!!!! He has a new one coming on April 14.
Gabriela, I'm 71 years old and remember bass singer Tennessee Ernie Ford when he sang this. In all my years I have never heard bass like this, TEF couldn't get that low. Another coal mining song Geoff sings Big Bad John is one you may want to hear.
Geoff and his acapella group VoicePlay (formerly known as 4to5) have been around a long time. But he only started doing solo music vids during the COVID restrictions. He also has spoken vids (like Edgar Allan Poe) on there. And he posted some vids on how he developed his lower voice range. You're right... it was a lot of practice and a lot of pain. He uses a combination of growl, vocal fry and subharmonics. The growl technique... which he learned from his friend Tim Foust, the bass for Home Free... is basically just clearing your throat on pitch. Subharmonics means you somehow tell your vocal cords to alternate between strong and weak vibrations. That way, if you sing an E2 for instance, it sounds like an E1.
The song Sixteen Tons came out in 1947. But the most famous version was released by "Tennessee" Ernie Ford in 1958. It's about the 19th and 20th century practices of mining companies. Building a whole village next to the mine, with private homes, stores, a school, everything. Besides the provided housing, the miners were paid wages, but in private script instead of real money. That meant they could only spend it at the Company Store where everything was a fixed price. The guy in the song is working as hard as he can, but he keeps falling further behind.
Anyway... If you react to music by the acapella groups VoicePlay, Home Free, and Pentatonix, and to solo vids by their individual current or former members, you'll pick up a lot of English-language subscribers and will have enough material to last you for a couple of years even if you do vids every day. Have fun.
That boy could steal your girl
Pretty sure you will LOVE his cover of Elvis' Way Down. It's pretty funny, he uses his "back up trio" for comedy...still beautiful, but ALSO silly. Pay attention to their name tags.
I already reacted and loved it. It was actually my first reaction on the channel. Thank u ❤
OMG I absolutely loved this reaction from you 😂 his cover of house of the rising sun is one I think you'd enjoy as well 💜
Reage a uma outra música dele, “far over the misty mountains cold”. Ele faz uns graves absurdos também nessa!
Anotado!! ❤
Bonjour, je trouve que vous avez une bonne analyse des vidéos. Vous êtes lucide et joyeuse. Merci
Olá, eu acho que você tem uma boa análise de vídeos. Você está lúcido e alegre. Obrigado
O cara tem a voz mais coisada aqui na internet, só as gringas conhece ele, tu é a primeira Brasileira que vejo que conhece meu brother, engraçado kkk
You've reacted to VoicePlay many times, and Geoff still surprises you?
Lol.
By the way - this was all done in chest voice. No tricks.
Todas as vozes que ouve é sempre o Jeff em todas as vozes. Em tem varios videos que ele faz vários tons de voz. Muito bom mesmo
Geoff is a super talented low bass singer, he can sing fairly high so all of the voices(parts) youre hearing are all Geoff! I love Geoff, but i prefer Tim Foust from the acapella group Home Free! Listen to Tim Foust and Peter Hollens sing Misty Mountains! Everyone in Home Free is super talented!
What language is she speaking? It's not Spanish...
There aren't many men who can sing as deep as Geoff. One of the few who can is Tim Foust from the accapella group, Home Free. The Bass Gang is another good group if you love deep tones.
I reacted to some home free videos and loved it. I hadn't heard of that other group, the bass gang, yet.
Essa è uma velha canção sobre a vida dos mineiros de carvão. Foi estrenada em 1946 por Merle Travis, e fala da condição dos mineiros, forçados a viverem em "cidades da mina". Eles eram pagados com bons que sò podiam-se gastar na loja da companhia mineira, assim que eram de fato escravos, pois nunca conseguiam pagar suas dividas à companhia que os exploitava até a morte.
Se você quiser experimentar o Geoff em toda a sua extensão vocal, pode começar por "Far over the Misty Mountains cold", que faz parte da trilha sonora do filme "The Hobbit". Nesse video também ele è todos os personagens que se vêm, e canta todas as partes. Ou então pode ver a "Rains of Castamere", ou a "The sound of silence", ou "Ghost riders in the sky"... Ou talvez a "House of the Rising Sun". 🙂
Até a próxima!
Anotado! Obg :)
I have a voice like this. And it is a gift from Dios, God,. And it all starts in your mother's belly when the male child receives testosterone. And when the male child receives alot of testosterone at birth. When he hits puberty, his voice deeps to be like James Earl Jones. And their vocal box develops to almost fill his whole through. And it gives people like Geoff the range of C4 to G1.
You need to react to a song sung by Tim Foust, of Home Free, called, " Will You Still Love Me. I have that same range as Geoff Castellucci, Avi Kaplan, Tim Foust, and Josh Turner.
There is no filtering or editing. It is all coming from him. It is a gift from God that men like that can sing like that. And it's called subhamonics that allows a man like that to hit such low vocal notes. And he it able to have such range because his vocal box is 2.5 to 3 times bigger than a normal male vocalists. And that is because God gave him 3 times more testosterone because God wanted to enjoy hearing him sign for Him.
Tenta esse é o cantor original ruclips.net/video/3I15_KUsOzs/видео.html , desculpa por isso.
Geoff and his clones are using coal mining tools as instruments here. The song is a lament from a coal miner who is paid so little that he must borrow from his employer to aford to live. He feels that if he dies, he will not be able to go to Heaven, because he will have to pay his employers his soul to clear his debt.
😢
It wasn’t so much “borrowing” from the company. Coal miners, up until it was banned in 1935, were paid with company script, which could only be spent at the Company store. The store charged outlandish prices for everything from milk and bread to meat and vegetables, etc., so the workers were perpetually in debt to the company. It was essentially a form of slavery.