@@FadikMuryanakqThe tone that he sings is a G1. I was referring to his speaking voice earlier, specifically the "do" in "Basso Profundo". After listening to it a few more times the "do" sounds more like a Bb1 to me now.
worldcomedyproducts that's why you can't always assume a person's voice type by their speaking voice. I speak like a lyric baritone, but I'm actually a low bass. You never know what someone could do with their voice!
The Batman Guy generally yes. Being relatively new to singing, my range fluctuates a lot due to various misuses I put it through, but I'd say an A is pretty average for me. I've gotten much lower, but I also have days where even just C2 is an issue. I really need to practice more and stop shouting my voice out lol. I have a video up on here of singing Bb1s from a good distance, and various other recordings on my phone and otherwise
Have you heard Dimash? Kudaibergen is known for his wide vocal range of 6 octaves and 5 semitones, his range from notes below the lowest note of the Bass register to beyond the highest notes of the Soprano register. #DimashKudaibergen
I sing bass in two choirs, but like everyone else in both choirs, I'm a baritone. I can hit a pretty decent Bb1 when practicing, but my lowest reliable note for performance at the moment is an E2. Not gonna lie, real bassos like this dude make me kind of jealous 😅
However people often think you aren't a bass unless your voice is as deep as Glenn Millers, which just isn't true, people often don't realize that you don't need to be a Basso Profundo to be a bass
That was funny when Mr. Miller was singing the double-low G and he looked out the corner of his eyes at the camera like *yeah... that's right... get a good glimpse of this!"😅
I never expected to see you on an oktavist video! I love your reviews, covers, and range videos. Awesome job! Are you familiar with the oktavism channel?
The fact that we don't have many more interviews with him is so sad. I'd like to watch him speaking for 2 hours straight, and also to know more about his story,
Bro you can find a hour or two long interview of him with bobby bass I forgot the guy's name he is an opera singer in a bass group. Ah yes his name was Peter barber.
@@Hitman-47 i think u mean to say more low. deep is more of a texture/timbre thing. and it doesnt matter whether its a G1 or a G#1 to pull either of those notes out of ur pocket like that and have them be that full and loud is something reserved for only a few profundos in the world
@@aamirrza888 I mean, it is an expression, yes, but... such a deep bass is such a nice and rare thing to have. Idk. Good thing there is no real offer on the table, I might actually consider it. lol
@@kekenator_4345 nah, ah basso profundo can sing one whole octave below normal bass notations. That would mean C1... I've yet to hear about anyone TRAIN their way to a voice like that, without using subharmonics, firebreathing or ingressive phonation... If you have a shitty voice when trying to speak low, you're definately not a basso profundo...
“So you can do like the monks in Tibet?” No bitch, they do growling, any voice can do that it’s a skill, and you’re talking to a unique voice! One of the few in the world
From the way you express yourself you don't seem like a person with good manners. Ter I assure you that in this way you earn much less than being nice and polite The things I have heard from those Tibetan monks sound very good but they are not notes made with the vocal cords but they use another technique called "Sub harmonics". You can see a very good explanation about this in this video by Geoff Castellucci ruclips.net/video/RW-s5fotJNo/видео.html&ab_channel=GeoffCastellucci I took a while to answer you but I hope it helps you improve your manners.
Bitch I'm laughing bc he didn't have to try at all to go low with that G#1. He was like "Yeah humans generally say this is impressively low, doing some mid-chest amazes them so I don't really need to push myself" And the funniest part is it worked 😂 I could easily hear that G#1 wasn't even low for him 😂
That G1 was so easy for him. I feel like he could do much lower note but he though something like "I don't give a fuck, it will be low enough for them anyway" lel
***** He gets there eventually. Hey, it's nothing to argue about. The guy simply cranked out something really low on command and it was impressive as heck. We already know he can sing a G1 live. Not only that, but can sustain it for a long time with decent resonance to fill up an auditorium.
Can you give me an example (a link would be much better) where Cesare Siepi, Giulio Neri or Peter Lagger sing a G1 ?. You should check if you do not get confused about octave. From what I've heard they can sing a G2. I have never heard a G1 of them. I think in this case you should change your nickname by diesesmalfalsch. Regards!
Sim, o assunto suscita muitas observações e comentários. Para o meu gosto, Sr. Glenn Miller obtém o melhor resultado considerando todos os fatores juntos. Há muitos que fazem notas extremamente graves, mas precisam de um amplificador para serem ouvidos; outros, ao variarem as notas, não conseguem manter o “timbre” ou a “cor” da voz, bem como a potência e a qualidade. São muitos detalhes que, na minha opinião, colocam esse baixo profundo em lugar de destaque. Saudações e boa sorte da Argentina!
@@54321blader idk why you replied to me for that a flat G# is the same as a flat Ab they are the same note except the name changes depending on what key you sing in I guess major/minor keys
Hello! Yes, I know him but in these things you have to make an important differentiation. There are many that sound wonderful but need a microphone, otherwise you can't hear what he sings. Glenn Miller stands on a stage with no microphones and they hear him from the front row to the back and he makes them cringe (haha). There are several tricks with the voice when you have amplification but from my point of view that is "cheating".
@@bradycall1889 Yes, I don't know what they call this way of making bass notes (my language is Spanish), but it is not the normal pathway of the vocal cords. I think some call it "sub harmonics" but I think this only refers to notes and can be done with the vocal cords as well. The case that amazes me and it is not clear to me how he does it is Mr. Ken Turner. He makes really low notes, but always with a microphone. Mr. Miller has a legitimate deep powerful voice with vocal chords. Greetings from Argentina!
NextenBlade when i wake up on a good day i can sing a Bb1 too. he can sing a C1 over an entire choir. the lowest note is an A0, did you mean Bb0 not Bb1?
Tijaani E no, its not resonant, its quiet, and it probably doesn't sound good. the lowest note i can really sing would probably be a C2, but i can only sing it with resonance and such in the morning after i wake up. the way to make it sound resonant is to open up your throat (just like the feeling you get when you yawn) and make sure there is no air/sound coming out of your nose, and that might seem weird to think about, but just try to replicate the feeling you get when you yawn, and just exhale like you were yawning. while exhaling, start to produce a note, any note, just not a low one. if you can't tell your doing it right, just pinch your nose with your fingers and try it again, if you don't feel any vibration in your nose, then you got it right. this is a good start, but if your really interested in sing, i would try voice lessons, preferable someone who specialises in voice and singing, not just any musician.
Tijaani E no. strohbass is just another term for vocal fry, and i cant stand it. i wouldn't use vocal fry if it made me the lowest bass in the world. and subharmonics is just theoretical (like my name!... well, except its not really physics). and he definitely sounds like full voice. again, you can't learn how to sing like this, you just have to be gifted with thick, long, heavy vocal chords. people dont appreciate basses as much as other voice types anyway.
You don't need to be a basso profondo to chant like Tibetan monks. They use a different technique, with the false vocal chords to go low, it's not classical chest voice.
@@mcmerry2846 Not necessarily, they can be all timbres from tenor to bass but their technique is throat singing which sound a lot stronger than regular singing but it's also incredibly difficult to get it done good.
I agree. Some say "profundo," because they say it in Spanish. In reality, if you say "basso" you would have to say "profondo." It's true. It happens that nowadays there is a fashion to say things in any way and it would seem that everything is fine, haha. I just wanted to be fashionable, hahaha.
@@Fredixxlfull Actually is in the Latin language, but it means < spread, pour out, scatter> And the Spanish language is Latin-rooted. :D Listen to < Oh, wie will ich triumphieren!> sung by Josef Greind in 1954 from an opera by Mozart < Die Entführung aus dem Serail, K 384 > can also be found in You Tube.
48,995 Hz - per the title of tis video, would be ULTRAsonic - more than 2 x the *highest frequency audible to humans. G1, on the other hand is 48.999 Hz- 3 notes above the lowest bass guitar note (E1, which is 41.203 Hz).
Hello! I understand what you're saying. It happens that in the country where I live (Argentina) and also in others, the punctuation marks are different than in the US and other countries. Here the comma (,) is used to separate the integers from the decimals and the period (.) to separate the thousands. I don't know if Google's translation made this understandable, ha! If you consider this you will see that we agree. Greetings and good luck!
Imagine if that lady asked Zlatopolsky to give an Impressive low note... Dude woulda vibrated the entire building... Glenn Miller can hit lows, but not all that powerful in comparison to Mikhail
Well sorry to make you scared but when Miller was about me and your age his voice was a tenor then he hits puberity hes a damn basso profundo when we grow up we will be tenors...
neil johnson that is not true why would you guys change to tenors? It’s possible, but definitely not likely. Having an Eb2 at 13 is a good sign he will be a low bass or profundo.
Rodeo Rodeo Because some of these "basso profundis" cant project over a choir or even singing alone. Their voice is so quiet that they need a microphone. A lot of dudes can croak low notes in a mic. These real oktavists are different, theyre able to hit these notes loud and resonant, over a whole choir of people singing without any amplification.
This video is a part of a longer one (ruclips.net/video/pSU6DdPi0K4/видео.html) Possibly the editor I used for some technical reason that I don't know has altered the sound a bit. The original is a G1. Regards!
philip elwood JD Sumner wasn't nearly this low. Miller has been recorded singing a G1 over an entire choir multiple times, JD Sumner only ever got that low with his mouth practically swallowing the microphone.
+iamQuiliamQuil I met JD Sumner once and it was very strange how naturally low his speaking voice was. It was surreal. Honestly to be fair, he was never really required to do what other trained oktavists do without such amplification. He didn't have the same resonance but of course he didn't really need it. Who knows what would've happened if he had the same vocal training early on?
+randyjsing JD's speaking voice almost sounds like vocal fry. I think maybe he had some long ass vocal cords but maybe didn't have the air support to get the projection out of them.
The naivete of that woman irritated me when she compared Glenn to a monk's throat singing, especially because they are singing the fundamental an octave higher than he does... 🤦♂️
Yes, the technique that those monks use is that of sub harmonics, which is not a natural note made with the vocal cords. It is a technique that in many cases sounds very good but it is not a true voice. If you hear them talk, many of them sound more like young ladies.
@@Fredixxlfull Sort of, but it's actually called kargyraa, which is different than subharmonics. In kargyraa, one vibrates their false folds with extreme forceful tension, which does produce a note an octave lower like in subharmonics; however, with subharmonics they are produced by extreme relaxation, and the false folds are actually not vibrating at all. Honestly, I'm still confused as to how subharmonics are mathematically possible. I'm starting to believe that the human voice's fundamental is way deeper in pitch than the actual note heard, and that when one sings a subharmonic they are possibly just equalizing their voice. In other words, the lower frequency is always there, but overpowered by an overtone. If we think about it, a single bass in choir singing the bass part is always there, but in order for the bass part to be heard, you would need to equalize the sound by adding more basses. Add a lot more basses to the choir, and all of a sudden the bass part went from present but inaudible to the audience to present and audible. Of course this is just a theory or even more of a hypothesis, but it makes a lot more sense than an actual subharmonic existing off of the fundamental.
@@hypercubemaster2729 What happens is that what is considered "human voice" is the sound produced by the vocal cords. There are several that make very low notes, but do not do it with the vocal cords. They achieve a vibration in another place, surely in the throat and that shocking sound is not a sung sound, that is not made with the vocal cords. I have seen some make very low and strong notes making the air go from the outside to the inside. When I was younger I could do it, it doesn't work anymore. I don't think it's good to do it. As for what you say about the fundamental note, all sounds have a fundamental note and a different composition of harmonics that are what give the characteristic sound to each thing. If two people sing the same note, the sound is not the same and it is due to the composition of harmonic waves. This can be seen on an oscilloscope. As for the bass of a chorus, if you equalize by removing mids and treble and increase the bass, you will hear the bass a little better.
@@Fredixxlfull Right; those are the false folds that are vibrating. Kargyraa is what you are referring to that the monks do. It isn't good for the voice, nor does it sound remotely pleasant; however, the sounds created are able to be projected an incredible amount. As for two people singing the same note, yes, I am aware of the differences in their "timbres" that that will both have. A bass trying to hit an F4 may sound a lot more 'trumpetlike' than a tenor that is extremely comfortable singing the note, as they will have to start guiding the sound out of their chest and up through their nose and facial cavities faster than the tenor would. As for the bass in a choir, that is pretty much what I said as well, lol. You add more basses to equalize the sound, which is equivalent to removing a lot of mid and treble voices.
@@patheddles4004 because there are people with voices that are more powerful than his at those lowest registers, and he might not consider himself up to those standards
when he was born he hit a G1 note instead of crying
jajajajajaja!
ahahahahah dude u killed me
This is the funniest comment I've ever read. 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
lol
3y ago's humor ol
his voice sounds heavier than the guy next him
Hahhahahahahhahahahahahha
elias veronezi Haha gave you 69 likes
While a low voice can be indicative of your weight, being fat causes more estrogen and therefore results in a higher voice.
@@aleksandrhoang1649 I am a 120 kilos man whos sings Bass closer to a Basso Profondo
Aleksandr Hoang I cant tell if I need to r/woooosh you
That was impressive how deep his voice sounded when he said "profundo".
That's mostly 'cause the natural tone that comes with simply saying or singing "Do" or the word "low"
@@towerofresonance4877 More like a B1
Little Shadow: Huh, interesting.
@@froschgrosch5247I hear clear G1
@@FadikMuryanakqThe tone that he sings is a G1. I was referring to his speaking voice earlier, specifically the "do" in "Basso Profundo". After listening to it a few more times the "do" sounds more like a Bb1 to me now.
Oh my god. His speaking voice is like lower 2nd octave
Mine too, but Im actually a dramatic tenor. Go figure...
worldcomedyproducts that's why you can't always assume a person's voice type by their speaking voice. I speak like a lyric baritone, but I'm actually a low bass. You never know what someone could do with their voice!
The Batman Guy I speak around the same range as Miller here, but I can only go down to A. Go figure
Jake 3752 low A consistently?
The Batman Guy generally yes. Being relatively new to singing, my range fluctuates a lot due to various misuses I put it through, but I'd say an A is pretty average for me. I've gotten much lower, but I also have days where even just C2 is an issue. I really need to practice more and stop shouting my voice out lol.
I have a video up on here of singing Bb1s from a good distance, and various other recordings on my phone and otherwise
Wow, he effortlessly dips down to a B1 at 0:09 without even trying.
I would argue that that’s a Bb1
I think it’s fractionally between the two notes, but I’d argue it was more of a very slightly flat B1.
In any case, effortless and impressive!
Nope, I think it's un A1 or even G#1.
Hitman perfect pitch says otherwise... The note he gives the show host when asked is more like a G#1 though.
Have you heard Dimash?
Kudaibergen is known for his wide vocal range of 6 octaves and 5 semitones, his range from notes below the lowest note of the Bass register to beyond the highest notes of the Soprano register.
#DimashKudaibergen
This guy is the difference between people who can sing bass and people who ARE a bass
I think the same
Literally me being the first and dreaming to be the second 😭😭😭
I sing bass in two choirs, but like everyone else in both choirs, I'm a baritone. I can hit a pretty decent Bb1 when practicing, but my lowest reliable note for performance at the moment is an E2.
Not gonna lie, real bassos like this dude make me kind of jealous 😅
However people often think you aren't a bass unless your voice is as deep as Glenn Millers, which just isn't true, people often don't realize that you don't need to be a Basso Profundo to be a bass
@@buddhatortoise Yes I agree.
This dude was my choir conductor at my church when I was like 10-13, just found out he was a big deal
All little boys suffering virility complex all their life 😅
THERES NO WAY
That was funny when Mr. Miller was singing the double-low G and he looked out the corner of his eyes at the camera like *yeah... that's right... get a good glimpse of this!"😅
Yes, that was a kind of conspiratorial look for those who know how to appreciate these things.
Reporters ask the dumbest questions sometimes... I would be *so* much more prepared if I were to interview a man like Glenn Miller...
I'd ask "Well what is the lowest note you've ever hit?" or "Can you go from a B0 up to a C5?"
@A Capella Trudbol: They ask the dumbest things for ratings. It's stupid which is why people like Morgan Freeman always shuts them down!
0:17 aaaaa!!!
People keep correcting the note but I’m just in awe of how beautifully low Glenn’s voice is. 😮
I know right! Any musician knows that low note is a G natural, but who cares; his voice, in general, is extra low.
It's actually a G#1; ≈51 Hz
48,995 Hz would be somewhere around a really sharp F#10
Some European nations use commas where we would use periods and vice versa.
+Pastel Prince Same here in South America.
When you accidentally stumble across one of Axel's smart ass comments 😂
+David Larson Ditto 😂
I never expected to see you on an oktavist video! I love your reviews, covers, and range videos. Awesome job! Are you familiar with the oktavism channel?
This man's voice is smooth for being so low, you frequently get folks who sound a little more gravelly than that from my recent searchings.
The fact that we don't have many more interviews with him is so sad. I'd like to watch him speaking for 2 hours straight, and also to know more about his story,
You can find a longer interview here: ruclips.net/video/7S0k8jlmSGs/видео.html
Look up Oktavist Talkbox with Glenn Miller by user Alexander Mayang. Very good channel.
Bro you can find a hour or two long interview of him with bobby bass
I forgot the guy's name he is an opera singer in a bass group.
Ah yes his name was Peter barber.
The audience's response hysterical
90% of the comment section discussing whether it's a G1 or a G1#...
Can we stop it, and appreciate what we've just witnessed instead?
I understand but the more deep is the sound made with incredible resonance, the more impressive it is.
@@Hitman-47 i think u mean to say more low. deep is more of a texture/timbre thing. and it doesnt matter whether its a G1 or a G#1 to pull either of those notes out of ur pocket like that and have them be that full and loud is something reserved for only a few profundos in the world
@@heliotropeskies5918
Well, you said it better than me indeed so yep, I meant it.
Yes! Thank you!
Laugh my ass off! "Basso profoooooooondo!". God I would kill fir a voice like that.
really? is it a joke or u literally can kill a human being just to be able to speak like that ?
Abir Rzaev It is just an expression. It is quite common and it simply means that you wish you had something you lack.
@@aamirrza888 I mean, it is an expression, yes, but... such a deep bass is such a nice and rare thing to have. Idk. Good thing there is no real offer on the table, I might actually consider it. lol
@@kosmosyche as far as I know, you can surgically deepen your voice, right?
Guys, guys... let’s be real here...
He’s obviously a tenor...
Demon Voice Nah, he's a sopranist
He’s actually a full voice soprano 1, sometimes it gets low for him though
His morning voice is probably a mezzo-soprano, normal i'd say a really high soprano
Nah not a soprano. More like Mariah Carey's highest note on helium...
Nah. Pretty sure he's a contra tenor
i wish my voice was like that. i would go around causing avalanches and such like vavoom the eskimo on felix the cat.
U must train it to have base voice. U can be basso profundo but with really broken and shitty voice
@@kekenator_4345 nah, ah basso profundo can sing one whole octave below normal bass notations. That would mean C1...
I've yet to hear about anyone TRAIN their way to a voice like that, without using subharmonics, firebreathing or ingressive phonation...
If you have a shitty voice when trying to speak low, you're definately not a basso profundo...
@Steven Criscione I'm 6'4" and still painfully average in vocal range, just like you.
@Steven Criscione Life is unfair, try to smile regardless :>
I’m 6’ but my voice is down to usually wide vocals chords, I’ve sounded like Barry white since I was 17, but more booming like frank bruno
Press '6' to continually hear the impressive low note.
Wow! Love his voice💕
Man I wanna know what he sounds like if he were to inhale sulfur hexaflouride
Liana Vazquez We would have a natural disaster.
I have a very deep voice much like Glenn Miller here, and I have always wanted to try Sulphur Hexaflouride.
Pretty sure it would be innaudible
He'd sound like Darth Vader on steroids
error404
monstro de mais esse cantor! baixo pesado!
“So you can do like the monks in Tibet?” No bitch, they do growling, any voice can do that it’s a skill, and you’re talking to a unique voice! One of the few in the world
From the way you express yourself you don't seem like a person with good manners. Ter I assure you that in this way you earn much less than being nice and polite The things I have heard from those Tibetan monks sound very good but they are not notes made with the vocal cords but they use another technique called "Sub harmonics". You can see a very good explanation about this in this video by Geoff Castellucci ruclips.net/video/RW-s5fotJNo/видео.html&ab_channel=GeoffCastellucci
I took a while to answer you but I hope it helps you improve your manners.
He reached a Bb1 when saying basso profundo
With that being his actually voice I find it funny to imagine him scared and when he screams his "AHHHHHH" comes out exactly like that
I think that when he gets scared later he has to call the bricklayer to fix the cracks in the walls!
Bitch I'm laughing bc he didn't have to try at all to go low with that G#1. He was like "Yeah humans generally say this is impressively low, doing some mid-chest amazes them so I don't really need to push myself" And the funniest part is it worked 😂 I could easily hear that G#1 wasn't even low for him 😂
yh absolutely
He can go to C1
What a voice. Like a robot.
Yeah it is lol.
Its a slightly flat G#.
That's one way to put it!
Baixo profundo com voz metálica é muito legal.
That G1 was so easy for him. I feel like he could do much lower note but he though something like "I don't give a fuck, it will be low enough for them anyway" lel
Yes. You are right that it can give much deeper notes. Listen to the video notes ruclips.net/video/G1ZVSTjUnJ8/видео.html -from minute 4 or so-
I like how the crowd was so shooketh with the first time they heard him spoke
Dentist: Open your mouth
Him: 0:17
Lol
Lol
Lmao
0:08/0:09 WHOOOOOOO** whoa wha wha wha whoooooaaaaahhhh GOOSEBUMPS!!!!!!
Doctor: say "aahh"
Me: 0:17
Then the doctor says: my friend, I'm sorry to inform you that yours is a very deep problem!
0:24 her laught is like he still singing XD
Actually G#
No it's a g
***** No, it's a perfect G.
***** He gets there eventually. Hey, it's nothing to argue about. The guy simply cranked out something really low on command and it was impressive as heck. We already know he can sing a G1 live. Not only that, but can sustain it for a long time with decent resonance to fill up an auditorium.
And then settles on the G1. Problem solved.
randyjsing He doesn't settle on anything. It's G#.
0:17 Luuurch !
YOU RANG...?
0:05
Glenn: My voice?
Interviewer: yuh!
Can you give me an example (a link would be much better) where Cesare Siepi, Giulio Neri or Peter Lagger sing a G1 ?. You should check if you do not get confused about octave. From what I've heard they can sing a G2. I have never heard a G1 of them. I think in this case you should change your nickname by diesesmalfalsch. Regards!
ruclips.net/video/RPxU6HFWV98/видео.html
C2 Siepi here
A coisa está muito mais ligada a potência do que a extensão apenas.
Sim, o assunto suscita muitas observações e comentários. Para o meu gosto, Sr. Glenn Miller obtém o melhor resultado considerando todos os fatores juntos. Há muitos que fazem notas extremamente graves, mas precisam de um amplificador para serem ouvidos; outros, ao variarem as notas, não conseguem manter o “timbre” ou a “cor” da voz, bem como a potência e a qualidade. São muitos detalhes que, na minha opinião, colocam esse baixo profundo em lugar de destaque. Saudações e boa sorte da Argentina!
The guy next to him Im going to ASSUME is a classical Tenor?
It's a G#1.
My man, I felt that
PEOPLE PLEASE CAN YOU FIND A FULL EPISODE?
Doctor: Say 'ah''. (Peals himself off the wall)
I would love to hear is vocal range even growl
Sounds more like an Ab1
It’s a flat G#
@@hrized6816 Which is the same as a flat Ab
@@54321blader idk why you replied to me for that a flat G# is the same as a flat Ab they are the same note except the name changes depending on what key you sing in I guess major/minor keys
@@hrized6816 I was just making the same distinction you did to OP.
Play it at 2x speed
This video is a fragment of the complete one. There they sang and they were all dressed like that.
His sounds like the guy next to him was supposed to sound according to my imagination
I know I'm super late to the vid, but watching it at x .25 is the funniest shit I've seen in awhile
holy shit thats true
His speaking voice is usually from B1 to F#2.
Here you have another basso profundo: ruclips.net/video/xtAltg0ZIrY/видео.html
Hello! Yes, I know him but in these things you have to make an important differentiation. There are many that sound wonderful but need a microphone, otherwise you can't hear what he sings. Glenn Miller stands on a stage with no microphones and they hear him from the front row to the back and he makes them cringe (haha). There are several tricks with the voice when you have amplification but from my point of view that is "cheating".
@@Fredixxlfull Good point, yes.
@@Cubasenet33 🤔👍
@@Fredixxlfull Yes I agree with you. I think Mr Storms is a basso cantante using fry.
@@bradycall1889 Yes, I don't know what they call this way of making bass notes (my language is Spanish), but it is not the normal pathway of the vocal cords. I think some call it "sub harmonics" but I think this only refers to notes and can be done with the vocal cords as well. The case that amazes me and it is not clear to me how he does it is Mr. Ken Turner. He makes really low notes, but always with a microphone. Mr. Miller has a legitimate deep powerful voice with vocal chords. Greetings from Argentina!
his normal voice sounds like an average man on sulfur hexafluoride
imagine him on sulfur hexafluoride
Mikhail Zlatopolsky is lower and louder. The guy could hit a Bb1 - one note away from the lowest note on the piano.
The last note on a piano is an A0. Some pianos go down to a G or F0, but only because Bartok specifically wrote something for it.
I regular grand piano with 88 keys, where the lowest one is an A.
NextenBlade when i wake up on a good day i can sing a Bb1 too. he can sing a C1 over an entire choir. the lowest note is an A0, did you mean Bb0 not Bb1?
Tijaani E no, its not resonant, its quiet, and it probably doesn't sound good.
the lowest note i can really sing would probably be a C2, but i can only sing it with resonance and such in the morning after i wake up.
the way to make it sound resonant is to open up your throat (just like the feeling you get when you yawn) and make sure there is no air/sound coming out of your nose, and that might seem weird to think about, but just try to replicate the feeling you get when you yawn, and just exhale like you were yawning.
while exhaling, start to produce a note, any note, just not a low one. if you can't tell your doing it right, just pinch your nose with your fingers and try it again, if you don't feel any vibration in your nose, then you got it right.
this is a good start, but if your really interested in sing, i would try voice lessons, preferable someone who specialises in voice and singing, not just any musician.
Tijaani E no. strohbass is just another term for vocal fry, and i cant stand it. i wouldn't use vocal fry if it made me the lowest bass in the world. and subharmonics is just theoretical (like my name!... well, except its not really physics).
and he definitely sounds like full voice.
again, you can't learn how to sing like this, you just have to be gifted with thick, long, heavy vocal chords. people dont appreciate basses as much as other voice types anyway.
Closer to G#1
It’s a flat G#
he cant do a girly voice even if he wanted to
He can do mine, I'm a contralto but since still I'm a girl it could pass as girly 😂
You don't need to be a basso profondo to chant like Tibetan monks. They use a different technique, with the false vocal chords to go low, it's not classical chest voice.
Yeah, and they don't have a bass timbre, they sound high but pitched
@@mcmerry2846 Not necessarily, they can be all timbres from tenor to bass but their technique is throat singing which sound a lot stronger than regular singing but it's also incredibly difficult to get it done good.
Herman Trail
It's a G1
BenBistro004 no dip it says it in the title
No it’s not it’s a flat G#
Anyone else thought that 800lb man was going to have that voice?
No. And I take it you're 6 feet tall and a perfectly-muscled 175 lbs.?
@@Eiswirth1 Don't get all bitchy about it lmao, it's a joke.
G1...au ralenti !
0:17 when you go to Colorado
Why is he wearing a tuxedo?
The man sounds like an old cartoon villain
El secreto está en la barriga
Mannu Campos,Camila Peres o que falei sobre voz grave.
PROFONDO!
I agree. Some say "profundo," because they say it in Spanish. In reality, if you say "basso" you would have to say "profondo." It's true. It happens that nowadays there is a fashion to say things in any way and it would seem that everything is fine, haha. I just wanted to be fashionable, hahaha.
@@Fredixxlfull Actually is in the Latin language, but it means < spread, pour out, scatter>
And the Spanish language is Latin-rooted. :D
Listen to < Oh, wie will ich triumphieren!> sung by Josef Greind in 1954 from an opera by Mozart < Die Entführung aus dem Serail, K 384 > can also be found in You Tube.
Oh! What you tell me is very interesting. Thanks for your comment. Greetings and happy 2024!@@Chan-Lin-Tao
The mad thing is, I’ve seen Chris McCafferty sing down to a B1 😳
Hard to believe.
@@MultiKamil97 it was a good day for him. Got scratchy towards the end but he reached it
His voice is lower than my BURP
Hahahahaha!
48,995 Hz - per the title of tis video, would be ULTRAsonic - more than 2 x the *highest frequency audible to humans. G1, on the other hand is 48.999 Hz- 3 notes above the lowest bass guitar note (E1, which is 41.203 Hz).
Hello! I understand what you're saying. It happens that in the country where I live (Argentina) and also in others, the punctuation marks are different than in the US and other countries. Here the comma (,) is used to separate the integers from the decimals and the period (.) to separate the thousands. I don't know if Google's translation made this understandable, ha! If you consider this you will see that we agree. Greetings and good luck!
OH, ok, that's interesting - didn't know that- sorry! @@Fredixxlfull
@@catkeys6911 OKAY. Everything is more than good. Greetings!
He sounds A LOT like Al Trautwig. Maybe Trautwig is a profundo as well
Imagine if that lady asked Zlatopolsky to give an Impressive low note... Dude woulda vibrated the entire building... Glenn Miller can hit lows, but not all that powerful in comparison to Mikhail
That was not a G1 but an Ab1
It’s a flat G#
He sounds like Darth Vader 😍
Darth Vader Anyone?
Download vocal pitch monitor app and see if its G1 or not
That was a flat G#1, not a G1
I'm 13 and i can sing an D#2 so..., i think if my voice continues changing, i'll be a basso profundo, right? I want it :'(
Well sorry to make you scared but when Miller was about me and your age his voice was a tenor then he hits puberity hes a damn basso profundo when we grow up we will be tenors...
neil johnson that is not true why would you guys change to tenors? It’s possible, but definitely not likely. Having an Eb2 at 13 is a good sign he will be a low bass or profundo.
What’s your lowest now?
@@chrisrutledge8170 Well he was referring to the testosterone changes in men between ages 12-40.
@@chrisrutledge8170 Has a male with more testosterone has a deeper voice.
So.... He's a Russian soprano.
press 6
He speaks like he constantly has sulfur hexachloride in his lungs. Or is it hexafluoride, that heavy gas?
Nope, that's he's actual voice
I love that little look at the camera. That's the look of "Let's see how many ovaries I just caused to explode"
I guess he ate a frog for Lurch, and downed it with a tuba.
He just went lower than JD Sumner?!?!
Kyle Duffy Lol, JD Sumner hited G0. Here's a G1
OK. J.D. need microphone. G.M. not.
@@Fredixxlfull How does a microphone affect how low/deep you can sing?
Rodeo Rodeo Because some of these "basso profundis" cant project over a choir or even singing alone. Their voice is so quiet that they need a microphone. A lot of dudes can croak low notes in a mic. These real oktavists are different, theyre able to hit these notes loud and resonant, over a whole choir of people singing without any amplification.
.
Bet the really big fat guy next to him has a soprano voice
He's a lyric tenor if I'm not mistaken.
sounds like G#1
This video is a part of a longer one (ruclips.net/video/pSU6DdPi0K4/видео.html) Possibly the editor I used for some technical reason that I don't know has altered the sound a bit. The original is a G1. Regards!
Its weird he is able to hit so powerful low notes- he is quite small guy while most basses looks like thick tower lmao
He is not a small guy lol he's 6'1
@Alexander Abdalla most basses are tall. Zlatopolsky was apparently somewhat short though.
@alexanderabdalla5517Zlatopolsky was 5’7/‘5’8
@@thomasoneill4386 Which is of course short for an exceptionally low pitched basso profondo.
Basses have more testosterone. Height is not very relevant.
Or a belch
Yes JD could do this and so could Glenn Miller and Ivan Rebroff and a host of others with more volumn
philip elwood JD Sumner wasn't nearly this low. Miller has been recorded singing a G1 over an entire choir multiple times, JD Sumner only ever got that low with his mouth practically swallowing the microphone.
+iamQuiliamQuil I met JD Sumner once and it was very strange how naturally low his speaking voice was. It was surreal. Honestly to be fair, he was never really required to do what other trained oktavists do without such amplification. He didn't have the same resonance but of course he didn't really need it. Who knows what would've happened if he had the same vocal training early on?
randyjsing Perhaps. I guess we shall never know.
But yeah...Glenn's the real deal, no doubt.
+randyjsing JD's speaking voice almost sounds like vocal fry. I think maybe he had some long ass vocal cords but maybe didn't have the air support to get the projection out of them.
press 6 on your keyboard!
The naivete of that woman irritated me when she compared Glenn to a monk's throat singing, especially because they are singing the fundamental an octave higher than he does... 🤦♂️
Yes, the technique that those monks use is that of sub harmonics, which is not a natural note made with the vocal cords. It is a technique that in many cases sounds very good but it is not a true voice. If you hear them talk, many of them sound more like young ladies.
@@Fredixxlfull Sort of, but it's actually called kargyraa, which is different than subharmonics. In kargyraa, one vibrates their false folds with extreme forceful tension, which does produce a note an octave lower like in subharmonics; however, with subharmonics they are produced by extreme relaxation, and the false folds are actually not vibrating at all.
Honestly, I'm still confused as to how subharmonics are mathematically possible. I'm starting to believe that the human voice's fundamental is way deeper in pitch than the actual note heard, and that when one sings a subharmonic they are possibly just equalizing their voice. In other words, the lower frequency is always there, but overpowered by an overtone. If we think about it, a single bass in choir singing the bass part is always there, but in order for the bass part to be heard, you would need to equalize the sound by adding more basses. Add a lot more basses to the choir, and all of a sudden the bass part went from present but inaudible to the audience to present and audible. Of course this is just a theory or even more of a hypothesis, but it makes a lot more sense than an actual subharmonic existing off of the fundamental.
@@hypercubemaster2729
@@hypercubemaster2729 What happens is that what is considered "human voice" is the sound produced by the vocal cords. There are several that make very low notes, but do not do it with the vocal cords. They achieve a vibration in another place, surely in the throat and that shocking sound is not a sung sound, that is not made with the vocal cords. I have seen some make very low and strong notes making the air go from the outside to the inside. When I was younger I could do it, it doesn't work anymore. I don't think it's good to do it. As for what you say about the fundamental note, all sounds have a fundamental note and a different composition of harmonics that are what give the characteristic sound to each thing. If two people sing the same note, the sound is not the same and it is due to the composition of harmonic waves. This can be seen on an oscilloscope. As for the bass of a chorus, if you equalize by removing mids and treble and increase the bass, you will hear the bass a little better.
@@Fredixxlfull Right; those are the false folds that are vibrating. Kargyraa is what you are referring to that the monks do. It isn't good for the voice, nor does it sound remotely pleasant; however, the sounds created are able to be projected an incredible amount.
As for two people singing the same note, yes, I am aware of the differences in their "timbres" that that will both have. A bass trying to hit an F4 may sound a lot more 'trumpetlike' than a tenor that is extremely comfortable singing the note, as they will have to start guiding the sound out of their chest and up through their nose and facial cavities faster than the tenor would.
As for the bass in a choir, that is pretty much what I said as well, lol. You add more basses to equalize the sound, which is equivalent to removing a lot of mid and treble voices.
Its called a bassar profoondar
he would never call himself a true basso profundo
Wait, why not?
@@patheddles4004 because there are people with voices that are more powerful than his at those lowest registers, and he might not consider himself up to those standards
@@henrymccue2922 definitely a basso profundo, he may not consider himself a contrabass or true oktavist
@@jonathanw1106 oktavist is a different classification for eastern european choral works
Um he never said that about himself.
Impressive, even if it's an A flat. Not G.
What is his speaking voice lol
Basso Profundo or Oktavist.
Faudrait que son voisin arrête de lever la fourchette 😮
Despite that I'm a four and half octave bass-baritone, he's got an impressive extended range hitting that low G.
corpse husband
Don't compare Glenn to corpse
Corpse speaks in perpetual fry with a low EQ filter lmfao don't put him in the same sentence as a true oktavist.