In music, a baritone is a
male
singer whose
vocal range falls somewhere
between that of a
bass and a
tenor. A typical baritone's
range will extend from around the A a tenth below
middle C to the F above
middle C.
Types
A high baritone, bordering the
tenor range, is sometimes
called Baritone-Martin, after the French singer Jean
Blaise Martin (1769-1837).
The roles of Pelléas in
Claude Debussy's
Pelléas et Mélisande
and of Ramiro in
Ravel's L'Heure
espagnole are written for this type of voice.
The term
bass-baritone is
sometimes used to mean a singer who has a range just
slightly higher than that of a bass. Some famous
bass-baritones include
Walter Berry and
Thomas Quasthoff.
Baritone instruments
The word "baritone" is often applied to
instruments to indicate their range in relation to other
instruments of the same group, for instance the baritone
saxophone. There is also a
brass instrument called the
baritone horn; being a
member of the
saxhorn family it is not
closely related to the
French horn. It is
distinguished from the
euphonium by its bore size
and shape (the baritone horn has a smaller and more
cylindrical bore, the euphonium a more conical one), and is
only found in
brass bands and
wind bands, traditionally
alongside euphoniums. It is also possible to get a baritone
guitar; this is an electric guitar with an extended scale,
so there is more stability when it is detuned. The standard
Baritone Guitar tuning is (low to high) BEADF#B.
Barbershop baritone
In
barbershop music, the
baritone part sings in a similar but somewhat lower range to
the lead (singing the melody), but has a specific and
specialised role in the formation of the four-part harmony
that characterises the style. Because barbershop singers can
also be female, there is consequently such a singer (at
least in barbershop singing) as a female baritone. The
baritone singer is often the one required to support or
'fill' the bass sound (typically by singing the fifth above
the bass root). On the other hand, the baritone will
occasionally find himself harmonising above the melody,
which calls for a tenor-like quality. Because of the nature
of barbershop arrangements the baritone part is invariably
the most challenging to learn and the hardest to improvise.
Famous baritones
Many singers in
popular music have been
baritones, such as:
Some famous baritones in classical music
include:
See also