Singing Voice & Race - Why Do Black Women Sound Different From White Women, who Sing Well

  • 🇵🇦 Nuestro primer dominio localizado está en español en kiwifarms.pa. Our first localized domain is on Spanish on kiwifarms.pa.
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account

Mariposa Electrique

October 4-18, Chris Will Be Happy!
True & Honest Fan
kiwifarms.net
Registrado
3 de Jun, 2016
I've always loved singing, I am a lyric sopranno, but I have not sang regularly in years. What always struck me was that women of different races sound completely different. I am sure there are amazing singers from different races, but the disparity in sound seems to be the most dramatic between blacks (Africans, African-Americans, African-European) and white women. The black voice is a lot heavier and despite when women try to sing like black women, they still sound like white women.
Kelly Clarkson sounds just like you'd expect her to sound, like a white woman trying to impersonate a black woman

Mariah Carey sounds mixed race

Nina Simone sounds just like you'd expect a black woman to sound.....
:thinking:
 
I mean, hot take that will never be repeated out loud in our lifetimes without some serious backlash: given that Black people and White people have vastly different nasal and facial structures (which developed in vastly different environments over thousands of generations), how much of a surprise is this?
 
You're not alone, pretty much everyone can tell race from voice, both speaking and singing. I actually really like black singing voices, but I'm sure it's just a matter of taste. In speech, we can all easily tell a speaker of standard English from a speaker of black English. However in song, I'm not sure if that fully explains this phenomenon -- perhaps there are some physiological differences that account for the perceived differences.
 
Honestly, it depends on the vocal range of the woman and how they got popular. I am certain there's black female singers who "sound" white and white women that "sound" black, but they haven't been brought to light because... society isn't expecting that from them? I'm talking out of my ass here lol.
Actually a brief moment where I can see a possibility of that expectation being thrown away was during the 90s house boom, there's a couple eurodance hits towards the end of the 90s where the women had a strong voice and it was unclear the singer was black, mixed, or not.
 
The Pointer Sisters are fucking awesome, watch it.

I think what you're asking about is melisma. It's not exclusive to black singers -- think of Gregorian monk chants. A lot of singers nowadays tend to overdue it, because they're not properly trained. Early soul singers used it, but not to the extent people do nowadays. It was seen as something you used to enhance your voice, not to totally takeover.
 
. I am certain there's black female singers who "sound" white and white women that "sound" black, but they haven't been brought to light because... society isn't expecting that from them? I'm talking out of my ass here lol.
It's refreshing when people who subscribe to the idea that everything is culture and nothing is biological, then admit that it's a completely unfounded presumption.
 
I have sometimes assumed that I was listening to a male singer only to discover later that the artist was a black female afterwards.
 
Is the reason no Eartha Kitt has been posted here is because she's the endgame whose singing aged like the finest wine?
 
Atrás
Top Abajo