Geoff and Kathy wanted to give this piece a hopeful ending.... it came after the gramaphone logo Hope you get your bass voice back soon! Hint - Voiceplay's Hellfire from Hunchback of Notre Dame.
Ooooo....good to see you again! This was a fun reaction, even if it wasn't your best 'bass day'. The way you break the 4th wall to look at us meaningfully when Geoff does something very low, gives me the snickers. As if you weren't expecting it? Don't know if you noticed, but VoicePlay dropped "Hellfire" yesterday. Two villains in two days for Geoff and yet so very different. Geoff did a spectacular job on this one to make us feel a true lamentation. I don't remember the song being this effective in the movie. And I really liked the kind of schizo feeling to this. Not just in emotions, but even jumping in range in just the one singer line. He's done the jumps before, but it often has been among the different 'Geoffs'.
Geoff is the master of mixing his lowwww, gravelly voice (without specific tonality) with his super low musical notes. (Not a surprise to you, as you have reacted to LOTS of VoicePlay and Geoff solo vids). I've heard other singers DO it, but Geoff sets the bar. The lowest tonal note I picked up on in this piece was an E1. He does a few F#1s as well. I swear his spoken stuff sounds like a lower frequency... but I don't have the right test equipment to be sure. So... if you're bored (joking) with his E1s, I noticed you haven't reacted to Valhalla Calling... PLEASE put it on your list!! I'm subscribing so I can hear you do it! Anyway, enough geeking out on the depths to which Geoff might plunge at any given moment. Great reaction! You really seem to listen VERY closely. You pick up on stuff many other reactors miss. Thumbs UP!!!
So many behind the scenes people helped w/this 😢! Cuddos! It's magic! ❤ BTW - Voice Play didn't provide any background for this. All the background are layers of Geoff. Talented, isn't he? 😉
It's a lovely lament but makes me really feel for him. Geoff's top note is Ab5 so C5 isn't out of his range. Have you done Hellfire yet by VoicePlay - it's amazing.
The way he jumps around the octaves in this is just phnomenal. And sadly you stopped before the outro, and after they went to the trouble of making a snowfall to emulate the snow globe in the movie. Shame on you sir.
Lol, that C5 isn't even as high as Geoff can go - in Voiceplay's 'Queen in Five Minutes' he hits a crazy high note in the verse section of 'We Are The Champions!' (Not sure what it is, but it's way higher than this one.)
I think he went even higher in the Voiceplay short cover of Peaches. I think they said an F5 in mix voice which is insane considering he's getting down to F#1 and even an F1 in Chest
Remember that the "other guys" are just him singing the other parts & layering the tracks on top. Regulars to his channel have dubbed them the "Geoffettes". Also, he is naturally a baritone but practices to sing those bass notes.
1. I was referring to the "other Geoffs" when saying "other guys". I've been listening to him & Voiceplay since 2020 and have seen most of their stuff. 2. He may classify himself to be a (bass-)baritone, but you can't train all that much to get deeper notes. Your vocal chords tighten on higher notes, and relax on deeper ones. Whilst you can train to tighten more to sing higher, you can only relax so much (that's why early morning after sleep, you have deeper notes, or after taking a warm bath). So yes, he's a bass, and a deep one. As a baritone, you couldn't train to sing an eb1 in chest.
Thanks for the reply. Since you follow him, watch his video titled "How To Sing LOW | Your Questions Answered: PART 2" in which he talks about his vocal range and vocal classification. He says he is a natural baritone with a bass range. His training to expand his range enabled him to get those subharmonics and encompass four octaves. He made a three part video answering questions about his video titled "How To Sing LOW" and this was one of the questions he is answering.
@@CJayBass Yes, we all agree that Geoff is a bass singer but he continues to call himself a baritone. All the expert bass singers agree that he is a bass singer. You would really enjoy a recent interview that bass singer, Peter Barber (Bass Gang), did as he called Geoff out and corrected him when he said he was a baritone- Peter told him he was a bass profundo.
This video was able to be monitized? Go home RUclips, you're drunk...
nah its fine you cussed 9 minutes in. they don't care as long as its not in the first 2 minutes
@@wowguy1243 Oh I'm talking more about the copyrighted music that usually makes it so the video can't be monetized lol.
OHHHHHHHHH my bad@@CJayBass
9:33 I feel your pain. LOL, great reaction and personal restraint. I really enjoy your reactions. It's always good to see you.
He belongs on Broadway. This was a god level performance.
Geoff and Kathy wanted to give this piece a hopeful ending.... it came after the gramaphone logo
Hope you get your bass voice back soon!
Hint - Voiceplay's Hellfire from Hunchback of Notre Dame.
Ooooo....good to see you again! This was a fun reaction, even if it wasn't your best 'bass day'. The way you break the 4th wall to look at us meaningfully when Geoff does something very low, gives me the snickers. As if you weren't expecting it?
Don't know if you noticed, but VoicePlay dropped "Hellfire" yesterday. Two villains in two days for Geoff and yet so very different. Geoff did a spectacular job on this one to make us feel a true lamentation. I don't remember the song being this effective in the movie. And I really liked the kind of schizo feeling to this. Not just in emotions, but even jumping in range in just the one singer line. He's done the jumps before, but it often has been among the different 'Geoffs'.
I appreciate Geoff's version of this song. It captures the duality.
Geoff is the master of mixing his lowwww, gravelly voice (without specific tonality) with his super low musical notes. (Not a surprise to you, as you have reacted to LOTS of VoicePlay and Geoff solo vids). I've heard other singers DO it, but Geoff sets the bar. The lowest tonal note I picked up on in this piece was an E1. He does a few F#1s as well. I swear his spoken stuff sounds like a lower frequency... but I don't have the right test equipment to be sure. So... if you're bored (joking) with his E1s, I noticed you haven't reacted to Valhalla Calling... PLEASE put it on your list!! I'm subscribing so I can hear you do it! Anyway, enough geeking out on the depths to which Geoff might plunge at any given moment. Great reaction! You really seem to listen VERY closely. You pick up on stuff many other reactors miss. Thumbs UP!!!
So many behind the scenes people helped w/this 😢! Cuddos! It's magic! ❤ BTW - Voice Play didn't provide any background for this. All the background are layers of Geoff. Talented, isn't he? 😉
It's a lovely lament but makes me really feel for him. Geoff's top note is Ab5 so C5 isn't out of his range. Have you done Hellfire yet by VoicePlay - it's amazing.
Not Ab5, but Bb5 actually. A whole tone higher
But not cest dominant, but yes even back then in Little mermaid he did D5 scream, so yes not his highest, but chest dominant almost limit.
The way he jumps around the octaves in this is just phnomenal. And sadly you stopped before the outro, and after they went to the trouble of making a snowfall to emulate the snow globe in the movie. Shame on you sir.
I actually did watch the outro, just didn't put it in.
Nice purr on that 'wide'. Geoff's high mark is Bb5 done in Peaches (short). This isn't a good one to miss the outro on!
Goeff = Halloween King!!
If you watch to the end he shows some bts including getting the makeup
❤❤❤❤
Great to see you back
Lol, that C5 isn't even as high as Geoff can go - in Voiceplay's 'Queen in Five Minutes' he hits a crazy high note in the verse section of 'We Are The Champions!' (Not sure what it is, but it's way higher than this one.)
d#5, 1.5 notes higher, indeed impressive
I think he went even higher in the Voiceplay short cover of Peaches.
I think they said an F5 in mix voice which is insane considering he's getting down to F#1 and even an F1 in Chest
Remember that the "other guys" are just him singing the other parts & layering the tracks on top. Regulars to his channel have dubbed them the "Geoffettes". Also, he is naturally a baritone but practices to sing those bass notes.
1. I was referring to the "other Geoffs" when saying "other guys". I've been listening to him & Voiceplay since 2020 and have seen most of their stuff.
2. He may classify himself to be a (bass-)baritone, but you can't train all that much to get deeper notes. Your vocal chords tighten on higher notes, and relax on deeper ones. Whilst you can train to tighten more to sing higher, you can only relax so much (that's why early morning after sleep, you have deeper notes, or after taking a warm bath). So yes, he's a bass, and a deep one. As a baritone, you couldn't train to sing an eb1 in chest.
Thanks for the reply. Since you follow him, watch his video titled "How To Sing LOW | Your Questions Answered: PART 2" in which he talks about his vocal range and vocal classification. He says he is a natural baritone with a bass range. His training to expand his range enabled him to get those subharmonics and encompass four octaves. He made a three part video answering questions about his video titled "How To Sing LOW" and this was one of the questions he is answering.
@@CJayBass Yes, we all agree that Geoff is a bass singer but he continues to call himself a baritone. All the expert bass singers agree that he is a bass singer. You would really enjoy a recent interview that bass singer, Peter Barber (Bass Gang), did as he called Geoff out and corrected him when he said he was a baritone- Peter told him he was a bass profundo.
@@acorrado5529 I have noticed him putting on his videos “low bass singer cover” so maybe he’s starting to believe it?
@@acorrado5529 I actually watched most of that interview, it was pretty good!
1:48 is An F#1 chest note
But You gotta love him...>^^
DON'T FORGET HELLFIRE!
I hope you check out VoicePlay's version of Hellfire...you will not be disappointed