the range, as other people have answered, is not always a good place to start. Some tenors sing low in their voices, and some baritones like the upper portions of theirs.
The idea of color, or timbre is a better guide to voice category. A lyric, or "young man" tenor will have a nice bright sound in his voice- tomato red, if you will. A dramatic, or "hero" tenor will be brick red, with a rounder sound.
A lyric baritone, also a young man sound, will start out crimson. His dramatic counterpart will be wine colored.
A young bass will sltart out maroon. His dramatic counterpart will convince you his voice color is black.
Then the application of range makes sense. Except for the outer reaches ( upper levels, definitely tenor, lower levels defintiely bass), most men sing in the middle of their voices. It might be diffiuclt to tell a lyric baritone from a dramatic tenor at this point, but you get used to the sound if you keep listening.
I hope you do!
2007-06-13 19:32:01
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answer #1
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answered by lynndramsop 6
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Pitch, a tenor normally sings the higher notes in the range. A baritone will sing the lower notes in a range. If you are looking at a piece of music the tenor range will start at E below middle C and the baritone will start at a E two octaves below middle C. They're both in the treble clef.
2007-06-13 17:14:48
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answer #2
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answered by xengold 4
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Tenor and Baritone refer only to the male voice range. You find tenors sing opera like Irish tenors. Baritones are midrange between tenor and Bass, which is the lowest range.
The Oakridge Boys " Elvira" has the lead who sings tenor, the om papa maw maw part sung by their Bass. Elvis was a great example of Baritone.
2007-06-13 16:32:25
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answer #3
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answered by godspeedlove 2
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Well, in opera, it's the tone of the voice.
You'll notice that the baritone has a richer and deeper sound (DEEPer sound).
And tenors have a smooth, higher pitch and a much more melodic sound that baritones.
Listen to just a portion of Marriage of Figaro.
You'll see.
2007-06-13 16:35:29
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answer #4
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answered by broadwaystarluv 2
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Baritone has a deeper pitch.
From deepest to highest they range from:
bass BARITONE tenor alto soprano
2007-06-13 15:41:03
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answer #5
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answered by Talaupa 5
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the tenor will sing in a higher range and will often sing a counter melody. The baritone will often sing the main melody or an "alto" part which will be a direct complement to the main melody.
2007-06-13 15:43:27
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answer #6
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answered by Ubi Caritas 3
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i'm a tenor, so, I think by baritone , you mean bass. tenor and bass are both baritones. tenor's are higher than bass. the order from lowest to highest is bass, tenor, alto, soprano.
2007-06-13 15:41:46
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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range of pitch
Bass (Baritone), Tenor, Alto, Soprano
2007-06-13 15:40:33
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answer #8
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answered by tabulator32 6
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Perfect pitch is not the ability to remember notes in a song and sing them well. Perfect pitch is like being able to recognize what fingering or what note name is a note that you hear. The piano will definitley come in handy. To find out if you have perfect pitch, ask a friend to press a random key on the piano(without you looking). Make sure they remember the key they pressed. Then look, think for a second, and press the key you think they pressed, based on what you heard. If you get it right many times in a row, you may have perfect pitch. If not, sorry. Also, try not to do it too much at one time, so you don't start to remember what the key your friend pressed sounded like, becuase that's technically cheating. Perfect pitch has nothing to do with memory.
2016-05-19 22:40:54
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answer #9
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answered by roberta 3
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hey tenor is A singer like Justin Timberlake a Bartione Is like Jaheim. They have different vocal range. One's way deeper than the other.
2007-06-20 18:08:17
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answer #10
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answered by Calen Totally Rocks 1
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