Here is the Youtube video:
What note is Robert John hitting at 2:50?
What about at the 3:15 mark?
Any info, as always, would be most appreciated.
Here is the Youtube video:
What note is Robert John hitting at 2:50?
What about at the 3:15 mark?
Any info, as always, would be most appreciated.
If at 3:15 you mean just after that (3:20-ish) – F#
At 2:50+ – the G just above that F#.
And if you need to know the octave, that’s F#5 and G5 in scientific pitch notation, or the top line and just above the treble cleff. It is the highest F# and G that most sopranos (high female singers) can hit, although it’s not too rare to be able to hit G6, albeit usually using whistle tone.
That said, it’s not unusual for men to be able to hit the notes you offered. I can hit it, although it’s outside of my “singable” range (meaning it sounds nasty). But it was in my singable range before I started lowering my falsetto to improve my tenor (high male voice) range.
Thank you for the information. I can go pretty high myself, but I don’t sound that good. Voices fascinate me, especially male voices that can operate well at a high range lie that (Robert John, Frankie Valli, Barry Gibb, etc.).