Deb wrote:Thanks a bunch for the answers, some of it is making a little more sense. Keep it coming. And thanks too Dave, so Plant is more falsetto when he sings high and Perry is more head voice?
Just to recap, there isn't a tremendous amount of difference between chest voice and head voice, other than the pitch. If you start at a low note, and increase the pitch as far as your voice will go, you will likely find a bit of a break where the transition isn't very smooth...then it will pick up again smooth. That break is the changeover between chest voice and head voice. It varies between people, and with training, can become indistinguishable.
Falsetto is totally different. If you sing a high-pitched
very soft note, you are likely in falsetto. One thing to remember however....falsetto isn't just high notes, even though that's what it is mainly used for. You can sing it low-pitched, and for that reason, there is a fair amount of overlap between head voice and falsetto, meaning you can hit the note both ways. I've actually heard that with training, you can hit higher notes in head voice than in falsetto. Either way, the difference between head voice and falsetto is HOW you sing the notes. One easy way to tell is that you lose a lot of depth in the voice when you go falsetto. It's not perfectly reliable though, because of the difference in depth of voices (ie Hugo is very thin normally, and he's in head voice most of the time). Perry was about 99% head voice, and I'm not sure I've heard any falsetto from Arnel or Augeri.
Examples show it off better than words will, so...
here's an example of the same note hit in falsetto, and then without falsetto....the "keep on" in Jimmy Barnes' rendition of Jackie Wilson's Higher and Higher
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ffi06Gb_MQQ
0:44 to 0:46....falsetto
1:24 to 1:27....head voice
notice the lack of depth on the first section
The best-known example of falsetto is Bee Gees. Staying Alive is basically ALL falsetto.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W_bPwi3pwAY
Here's another full song done in falsetto by John Farnham. Might be the only falsetto I've ever heard him do.
http://www.amazon.com/33-1-3-John-Farnham/dp/B00004YLKB --> listen to the I've Been Lonely For So Long soundclip. You'll notice a big change from his normal voice.
Perry didn't use falsetto much at all. You'll hear it in some of the very light notes mainly in the early recordings--ie the high stuff over the guitar solo in Wheel in the Sky.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RGbVoDVWZsc -- Wheel in the Sky starting about 2:44 to about 2:54
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BVvikzJHDDY -- much later Perry falsetto starting at 3:20 to about 3:28
clear as mud?