When he is singing Baby your so square at wembley what range is that because his voice changes considerably
freddiefan91 · Member since
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Micrówave · Member since
The answer is 7.
john bodega · Member since
He unlocked an extra octave when he shoved a dick in there.
Gregsynth · Member since
LOL at Zebonka's comment.
mattsmith · Member since
Isn't it great that a sensible question can receive a sensible answer from the regulars here on Queenzone.
Micrówave · Member since
Hold on, Matt. Let's break down this "sensible question".
[b]When he is singing Baby your so square at wembley what range is that because his voice changes considerably
[/b]First off, the track in question. This is probably the first question (ever) on Queenzone about this track on the Wembley show. Welcome to Queenzone, BYSS! Second, Freddie is not singing at his lowest or highest pitch on this song. Sure, he's all over, but that was Fred. His "singing voice range" is the same as on most of the rest of the tracks. Why are we not breaking that down, if this is so important?
Next, I'm wondering what this person intends to do with the answer. Judging from the wording of the question, if someone said "Tenor", would he really know what that means? I came up with my answer mathematically. With so many different languages in the world, we all speak the same language in Mathematics. I thought it would be a much easier way to answer the question.
Unfortunately, to understand my answer, you would have to re-ask the question, mathematically.
thomasquinn 32989 · Member since
[QUOTE]
[b]Micrówave wrote: [/b]
Hold on, Matt. Let's break down this "sensible question".
[b]When he is singing Baby your so square at wembley what range is that because his voice changes considerably
[/b]First off, the track in question. This is probably the first question (ever) on Queenzone about this track on the Wembley show. Welcome to Queenzone, BYSS! Second, Freddie is not singing at his lowest or highest pitch on this song. Sure, he's all over, but that was Fred. His "singing voice range" is the same as on most of the rest of the tracks. Why are we not breaking that down, if this is so important?
Next, I'm wondering what this person intends to do with the answer. Judging from the wording of the question, if someone said "Tenor", would he really know what that means? I came up with my answer mathematically. With so many different languages in the world, we all speak the same language in Mathematics. I thought it would be a much easier way to answer the question.
Unfortunately, to understand my answer, you would have to re-ask the question, mathematically. [/QUOTE]
If you got the question right (I can't rule out that you did, I can't rule out that you didn't) it would be "baritone", not "tenor".