Regine Velasquez' Vocal Range (A2-B6) [Part 4 of 4 - High Notes (A5-B6)]

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  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
  • High Notes (A5-B6)
    A5, Bb5, B5, C6, C#6, D6, E6, F6, G6, B6
    Regine Velasquez Vocal Range (A2-B6)
    Part 1- Low Notes (A2-F3)
    Part 2- High Notes (F5)
    Part 3- High Notes (F#5-G#5)
    Part 4- High Notes (A5-B6)
    REGINE VELASQUEZ: Regine is widely famous for her effortless and exceptional belting. She credits this from her father's vocal training technique wherein she is submerged in neck-deep waters and she runs through her singing exercises to strengthen her diaphragm and build up her vocal cords and lungpower. This paved the way for a genre of belting for female singers in Philippine music. Regine has a four-octave range and though she seldom uses whistle register she is skillfully adept in hitting very high notes that require head voice using her chest voice. She can run through a series of very high notes using chest voice alone and is able to hit notes in the fifth to almost sixth octave in full chest voice. She is also popular for her ability to go through her vocal acrobatics while hitting her very high notes. She has exhibited her belting and sheer lung power while singing onstage sitting in lotus position and even while being suspended up on a harness in mid-air. Her B5 in "Reasons" is perceived to be in pure chest voice. The Philippines wasn't just her ground for music, Regine represented the Philippines in the Asia-Pacific Singing Contest held in Hong Kong. On December 23, 1989, she won the contest with her songs, "You'll Never Walk Alone" and "And I'm Telling You". The exposure from the contest sky-rocketed her from Filipino celebrity to Asian music superstar almost overnight, from then on, she was hailed as "Asia's Songbird".
    thanks to the original uploaders of these videos

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