Alto (voice)
(Redirected from Contralto)
| Vocal ranges |
Female ranges
Male ranges |
In music, an alto is a singer with a vocal range somewhere between a tenor and a mezzo-soprano. The term is used to refer to the deepest female singing voice, or the highest male voice. A typical alto will have a range from around the F below middle C to the D a ninth above middle C (i.e. F3-D5); at the bottom of their range, altos sound almost like tenors. Some altos have even larger ranges; from the C below middle C to the C two octaves above (C3-C6 if middle C is C4). In four part choral harmony, the alto is the second highest voice. Altos originally sang from music written in the alto clef, but now use the treble clef.
Although both men and women may have voices in the alto range, the word is usually used to mean a female singer. However, choirs singing early music frequently include adult male altos, also called countertenors. In English church usage, the term alto is sometimes exclusively used to mean a boy with this range, while contralto is used for a female singer. However, this is not done consistently, and for most practical purposes, alto and contralto can be thought of as synonyms (the phrase "boy alto" can be used if there is a chance of misunderstanding). A few popular music enthusiasts define the contralto and alto separately, as the contralto having an especially dark range, from the D above low C to Tenor C, which is essentially a female of tenor range, while alto is a voice with a range from F below middle C to the F an eleventh above middle C, and is closer to the mezzo-soprano. The majority however define contralto and alto as synonyms, and assign the adjectives light and dark, with a dark alto being a female of tenor range, while a light alto, commonly referred to as simply alto, to include mezzo-sopranos as well.
In medieval polyphony the principal voice was the tenor. When additional voices were added, they were called contratenor, "against the tenor." When two such voices were added they were called contratenor alto and contratenor bassus, indicating high and low respectively. So alto essentially means high voice.
Contraltos are fairly rare in opera (and in general), since there is very little work that was written specifically for them. Most of the time, contralto roles are limited to maids, mothers and grandmothers, but they do occasionally get notable roles, with witches being the most common outside of the three former roles. (A common saying among contraltos is that they're only allowed to play "witches, bitches, or boys.")
The word alto is often applied to instruments to indicate their range in relation to other instruments of the same group. In common usage, particularly among jazz musicians, the word has become synonymous with the alto saxophone. In US usage the alto horn is an Eb saxhorn, a brass instrument.
Contents |
Alto Roles
- 3rd Lady (Die Zauberflöte)
- Azucena (Il Trovatore)
- Arsace (Semiramide)
- Birgitta (Die Tote Stadt)
- Carmen (Carmen)
- Dalila (Samson et Dalila)
- Frédéric (Mignon)
- Erda (Das Rheingold, Siegfried)
- La Cieca (La Gioconda)
- Jeanne (Jeanne d'Arc)
- Oberon (A Midsummer Night's Dream)
- Olga (Eugene Onegin)
- Orfeo (Orfeo ed Euridice)
- Orlando (Orlando)
- Pauline (The Queen Of Spades)
- Rinaldo (Rinaldo)
- The Witch (Hänsel und Gretel)
- Ulrica (Un ballo di maschera)
Famous altos
Classical music
- Marian Anderson
- Janet Baker
- Lili Chookasian
- Kathleen Ferrier
- Birgit Finnilä
- Maureen Forrester
- Marilyn Horne
- Sara Mingardo
- Yvonne Minton
- Ewa Podleś
- Ernestine Schumann-Heink
- Nathalie Stutzmann
Popular music
NOTE: In most cases, it is not possible to find a reputable source for the vocal range of pop singers. It seems most names were listed here on an empirical basis. It must be noted that in the pop world, the vocal range of a singer is often artificially enhanced.
- Aaliyah
- Sade Adu
- Fiona Apple
- Siti Nurhaliza
- Anita Baker
- Florence Ballard
- Fantasia Barrino
- Toni Braxton
- Mary Chapin Carpenter
- Tracy Chapman
- Cher
- India.Arie
- Kelis
- Alicia Keys
- Chaka Khan
- Gladys Knight
- Natalie Merchant
- Annie Lennox
- Brandy
- June Pointer
- Tionne Watkins
- Nicole Wray
- Cristina Scabbiade:Alt (Stimmlage)
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