Do you need to be a walking BASS encyclopedia to know that? I'm nothing but a basso profundo violin soloist with perfect pitch and even I know that... 🤣
I can't even make it clear singing E2 but I can hit D2, only in morning after I wake up where my voice is mainly lower but not much thicker since I'm a baritone. Just need to have good conditioned vocal cords and through time I can hit C2 when get older, hitting it with clarity, that makes me happy.
Only recently hit an E1 chest. I'm 22 and when I was 15 learning the ways of the bass barely maintaining a Bb1, E1 was a fever dream. It felt like something I would only be able to do in my dreams. My new goal is D1. If you put enough effort it, take care of your voice, and know your limits, you'll be fine. Keep on strong bass brothers! Also cuz people like to doubt on the internet I actually uploaded it as a short as I couldn't resist but to capture multiple videos.
You have a great sounding voice for bass singing. I sang bass for a good while in the gospel genre. That's where you find the best in bass. Try JD Sumners Christmas Carol Of Love. You'll se why he was the GOAT.
And to think I faked it till I made it in high school and college as a choir bass only capable of hitting an E2. Some of these genuinely terrified me lol
I'm sorry, but Ken Turner is such a fake bass to me. Sure he can sing low, but not as low as we think. If you pay attention, you can actually see him exhale in relief, because in his bottom contra octave notes, he had drawn in too much air inhaling and needed to breathe it out immediately after. Even his face looks like someone using ingressive phonation. Also, in the songs with the hispanic quintet, the bass is frying all of the low notes.
Actually he uses subharmonics not inhale or fry it may sound like it back when he was younger he had a low chest in Bb1 and subs the rest the way down to C1 his bass is thinning out because he got older and didnt have as thick of vocal cords now
@@SouthPawBowler24 He may use subharmonics for some notes, but it's blatantly obvious if you watch his forceful sigh of relief after getting done with his lowest notes in the song that he is using ingressive phonation. What happens when you continuously inhale for an extended period of time? Exactly: you have to push all that air back out, or you will die. Like I said, some of his lows are subharmonics, but the lowest ones are clearly inhaled.
@@hypercubemaster2729 I really don't want to continue this, but Mr. Turner j u s t n e v e r u s e d i n h a l e for _any_ of the low notes; it's t h a t simple, he just uses _subs_ under B1 (except for very few instances when he uses chest) and you somehow seem to have perceived the funny faces he constantly makes as being a gasp of air/"sigh of relief". Moreover, generally no one uses inhale in gospel music, it's either chest or chest-fry; Ken Turner is an exception in that he's the only one who uses subharmonics in this genre.
0:20 C2 chest into F1 vocal fry. Well done. Yes I am a walking bass encyclopaedia
Do you need to be a walking BASS encyclopedia to know that? I'm nothing but a basso profundo violin soloist with perfect pitch and even I know that... 🤣
Ken Turner is a legend.
Yes, Ken sold the whole show
Dave, just watching your reactions to these guys cracks me up!
Tim was actually recording the bass singer.
I can't even make it clear singing E2 but I can hit D2, only in morning after I wake up where my voice is mainly lower but not much thicker since I'm a baritone. Just need to have good conditioned vocal cords and through time I can hit C2 when get older, hitting it with clarity, that makes me happy.
Only recently hit an E1 chest. I'm 22 and when I was 15 learning the ways of the bass barely maintaining a Bb1, E1 was a fever dream. It felt like something I would only be able to do in my dreams. My new goal is D1. If you put enough effort it, take care of your voice, and know your limits, you'll be fine. Keep on strong bass brothers!
Also cuz people like to doubt on the internet I actually uploaded it as a short as I couldn't resist but to capture multiple videos.
The one you wanted to know the name of was Alusio junior
Fantastic guy. I love his energy.
You have a great sounding voice for bass singing. I sang bass for a good while in the gospel genre. That's where you find the best in bass. Try JD Sumners Christmas Carol Of Love. You'll se why he was the GOAT.
woah! for the ''bass guy'' of rainbow of love, his name is Aluisio Junior i think
Ken Turner
@@somerandomdragon558 aluisioi is the brazilian guy. He sang rainbow of love too
And to think I faked it till I made it in high school and college as a choir bass only capable of hitting an E2. Some of these genuinely terrified me lol
You should react to Jd Summer’s rainbow of love.
Could you please react to Bass singers oktavists and Basso profundos E2-G-3 by Clap it up Dan?
It's a pretty long one though
1:13 bro trying to be like drake so bad
Drake wishes.
@@whatitdodave drake the type of guy to say " were the baddies at" in the club
Southern Gospel quartets have historically had some of the lowest basses and highest tenors ever. That's kind of their thing.
I'm sorry, but Ken Turner is such a fake bass to me. Sure he can sing low, but not as low as we think. If you pay attention, you can actually see him exhale in relief, because in his bottom contra octave notes, he had drawn in too much air inhaling and needed to breathe it out immediately after. Even his face looks like someone using ingressive phonation. Also, in the songs with the hispanic quintet, the bass is frying all of the low notes.
Man is I'm pretty sure In his 80s he is a bass legend
Actually he uses subharmonics not inhale or fry it may sound like it back when he was younger he had a low chest in Bb1 and subs the rest the way down to C1 his bass is thinning out because he got older and didnt have as thick of vocal cords now
@@SouthPawBowler24 He may use subharmonics for some notes, but it's blatantly obvious if you watch his forceful sigh of relief after getting done with his lowest notes in the song that he is using ingressive phonation. What happens when you continuously inhale for an extended period of time? Exactly: you have to push all that air back out, or you will die. Like I said, some of his lows are subharmonics, but the lowest ones are clearly inhaled.
@@hypercubemaster2729 I really don't want to continue this, but Mr. Turner j u s t n e v e r u s e d i n h a l e for _any_ of the low notes; it's t h a t simple, he just uses _subs_ under B1 (except for very few instances when he uses chest) and you somehow seem to have perceived the funny faces he constantly makes as being a gasp of air/"sigh of relief". Moreover, generally no one uses inhale in gospel music, it's either chest or chest-fry; Ken Turner is an exception in that he's the only one who uses subharmonics in this genre.
Out of tune 62 hertz
Your face when you heard them low notes 😂 @whatitdodave