HOW TO

Male singer performing vocal warmup exercises
Tap a mode above, then click the matching key on the keyboard. Scroll sideways to find your note.
Lowest
Break
Highest
Male voice types Female voice types Your range
Baritenor and Belt/Mix reflect the contemporary pop & rock Broadway sound. Tenor and Soprano reflect legit, classical technique.
Coming soon — click a note and see exactly where it sits on the musical staff.

F.A.Q. Frequently Asked Questions

What is a vocal break (passaggio), and why does it matter for musical theatre?

Your vocal break, or passaggio, is the transition zone where your voice shifts from chest voice into head voice or mix. Knowing exactly where yours sits lets you choose material that either showcases a smooth transition through it or avoids sitting on it for long, sustained phrases — which is exactly the kind of detail casting directors and vocal coaches notice immediately in an audition.

What is a Baritenor, and how is it different from a Baritone or a Tenor?

A Baritenor is a modern musical theatre term for a voice with the depth of a baritone and the upper extension of a tenor — commonly F2 to C5. It became common once amplification let leading men sing rock- and pop-influenced scores without needing a pure classical tenor range, and it now describes many contemporary leading-man roles.

What’s the difference between Belt/Mix and a Legit Soprano or Mezzo-Soprano?

Legit describes a classical, head-dominant vocal technique typically used in golden-age musicals, while Belt/Mix describes the chest-dominant, speech-driven sound used in contemporary pop- and rock-influenced shows like Six, Mean Girls, and Legally Blonde. The same singer can often do both — this tool shows you where your range sits for each.

How should I list my vocal range on a musical theatre resume?

Most resumes list your range as lowest note to highest note in scientific pitch notation (for example, A2–A4), sometimes with your voice type in parentheses. This tool’s “copy for my resume” button generates that exact line for you, formatted the way most casting directors expect to see it.

Do I need a microphone or vocal training to use this tool?

No — just your ears and a bit of experimentation. Click through the piano keyboard until you find the lowest note you can sing comfortably, the note where your voice noticeably shifts gears, and the highest note you can reach, and the tool does the rest.