The growl technique has always been the hardest for me. G1 is within my chest range, but doing a growl down toward B0, it feels like I have to cough for 30 minutes afterward. My hats off to Tim for pulling it off time and time again.
After a month or 2 of practice, it doesn’t hurt for me anymore, so make sure to practice. Also a G1 in chest is crazy, personally my G1 chests are really quiet and I can only hit them with morning voice and “night voice” (for some reason my voice is really low at night) so if we’re saying like a full, recording level one, then wow, you have special vocal chords
@@smashmonster6929, just genetics; being 6'5", 280lbs, and of Swedish descent helps a bit, too. My dad and two of my uncles were bass singers. My daughter is a contralto, who can sing a projected A2 at the lowest and can cover most baritone lines.
Tim Foust is my favorite bass out there. Love his growl technique. Not only does he go very low but he can sustain it for a very long time. Not a fan of subharmonics. Just sounds like very low burping.
@@Notmiddleg there is actually a lot of people that did G#0 on that song. But most of them are not known enough or just didn't post it else than on discord. Even I (a tenor) did it in inhale so it's not that hard to do.
@@Hemli_clrgI made a video a year ago of people who did a G#0, and there were already 10. Now there’s a fair bit more. Since then me and someone else have done a G#-1 as well.
@@BassManMatteo yeah I saw your video, and I do agree that even the - 1th octave is getting used with inhale on that song but not much. Your inhale is very good btw👌
Ok that makes sense. My growls are breathy and i can only hold for like maybe 2-3 seconds. These guys can hold growl for a long time. Btw does it work like subharmomics? It lowers 1 octave of the pitch you are singing? If yes then it confusing because i can only hit B1 and A1 in subharmomics, after warming up quite a bit.
Its sometimes referred to as fryharmonics (not sure whether there is even a technical difference tbh since fryharmonics are usually based on chest fry and not pure fry).
Holy shit that G#0 is insane in headphones
The growl technique has always been the hardest for me. G1 is within my chest range, but doing a growl down toward B0, it feels like I have to cough for 30 minutes afterward. My hats off to Tim for pulling it off time and time again.
Yeah it takes lotta practice to get used to it
Oh yeah i remeber it used to feel so uncomfortable. But i practiced it sometimes. And now it doesnt really feel anything.
After a month or 2 of practice, it doesn’t hurt for me anymore, so make sure to practice. Also a G1 in chest is crazy, personally my G1 chests are really quiet and I can only hit them with morning voice and “night voice” (for some reason my voice is really low at night) so if we’re saying like a full, recording level one, then wow, you have special vocal chords
@@smashmonster6929, just genetics; being 6'5", 280lbs, and of Swedish descent helps a bit, too. My dad and two of my uncles were bass singers. My daughter is a contralto, who can sing a projected A2 at the lowest and can cover most baritone lines.
@@johndeeregreen4592 I mean I guess that does help too but my dad is like a bass/baritone so that’s good
Perfect song for low notes. I love it.
Tim Foust is my favorite bass out there. Love his growl technique. Not only does he go very low but he can sustain it for a very long time. Not a fan of subharmonics. Just sounds like very low burping.
Can you do a tutorial on strohmonics? It sounds great 👍 👌
sad Davis Kahn G#0 sub and others G#0 were not here but good video
Someone mightve done a G#0 once. Couldn't tell though
@@Notmiddleg there is actually a lot of people that did G#0 on that song. But most of them are not known enough or just didn't post it else than on discord. Even I (a tenor) did it in inhale so it's not that hard to do.
@@Hemli_clrgI made a video a year ago of people who did a G#0, and there were already 10. Now there’s a fair bit more. Since then me and someone else have done a G#-1 as well.
@@BassManMatteo yeah I saw your video, and I do agree that even the - 1th octave is getting used with inhale on that song but not much. Your inhale is very good btw👌
@@Hemli_clrg thank you!
Is it impressive to hit a G#1 or F#1 growl?
Cuz it seems pretty easy for me and i am not really that special, just a low baritone with F2 and E2.
Not really but have very chest-like with good quality and little air is
Ok that makes sense. My growls are breathy and i can only hold for like maybe 2-3 seconds.
These guys can hold growl for a long time.
Btw does it work like subharmomics? It lowers 1 octave of the pitch you are singing? If yes then it confusing because i can only hit B1 and A1 in subharmomics, after warming up quite a bit.
0:56 0:57
I think Geoff take this one
G1 chest is impressive but listening to 1:50 using headphones in max volume is crazy
Some terms here are new to me...what are "throat bass" and "strohmonics"?
hey i’m not fully sure about throat bass but i’m pretty sure strohmonics is subharmonics with chest-fry notes (may be wrong though.)
what are strohmonics?
never heard of them
also i'm not sure about that eflat1 throat bass
He ment subharmonics strohbass is something different
cool ty
Its sometimes referred to as fryharmonics (not sure whether there is even a technical difference tbh since fryharmonics are usually based on chest fry and not pure fry).
@@WKQEBwell it was, he doesn't use subs
Wtf is strohmonics??
I’m early