Tenor Vocal Range: Notes, Examples & Am I a Tenor?

The tenor is the highest standard male voice type, with a classical range spanning C3 to C5 and a tessitura of D3 to B4. In Hz, this runs from 130.8 Hz (C3) to 523.3 Hz (C5).

The upper landmark — C5 (523.3 Hz), known as “tenor C” or do di petto — is the traditional benchmark note for classical tenors, equivalent in significance to soprano C for female voices. It is the most commonly sought male voice type in both opera and popular music.


Tenor Vocal Range at a Glance

DetailValue
Classical RangeC3–C5
TessituraD3–B4
Lowest NoteC3 (130.8 Hz)
Highest NoteC5 (523.3 Hz)
Frequency Span130.8 Hz – 523.3 Hz
Primo PassaggioD4–F4 (293.7–349.2 Hz)
Secondo PassaggioF5–G5 (698.5–784 Hz)
Choral PartTenor 1 or Tenor 2
RarityLess common than baritone; one of the most sought voice types

What Is a Tenor?

The tenor is the highest standard male voice type, sitting above the baritone and bass in the male voice spectrum. Its defining characteristic is natural ease and resonance in the upper male register (E4–B4) — the zone that sopranos and mezzos occupy an octave above.

In classical music, the tenor is the most demanded and celebrated male voice type. Leading heroic and romantic roles in opera are overwhelmingly written for tenor voices — from Verdi to Puccini to Wagner. In popular music, the tenor voice dominates rock (most frontmen), soul, and pop.


Tenor vs Baritone: The Most Important Male Voice Distinction

FeatureTenorBaritone
Classical rangeC3–C5A2–A4
TessituraD3–B4B2–G4
Most resonant zoneE4–A4C3–E4
Passaggio (primo)D4–F4Bb3–C4
Tonal characterBright, forward, ringingWarmer, rounder, darker
Speaking pitchHigher — C3–F3 typicalLower — A2–D3 typical
High C capabilityYes (C5) — defining tenor markGenerally not accessible with full voice
Choral partTenorBaritone or Bass

The tenor can produce C5 with full chest or mixed voice resonance; the baritone typically cannot. This high C capability is the defining marker of the tenor voice type. See tenor vs baritone.


Tenor Subcategories

Lyric Tenor

Range: C3–C5 Tessitura: E3–B4 The most common tenor subcategory. A lighter, more agile voice with a bright, forward quality. Suited to melodic, flowing repertoire rather than heavy dramatic material. In classical opera: Tamino (The Magic Flute), Nemorino (L’elisir d’amore).

Pop examples: Bruno Mars (D3–A5), Michael Jackson (A2–F6 incl. falsetto), [Justin Timberlake].

Dramatic Tenor (Tenore di forza)

Range: B2–B4 (with power throughout) Tessitura: D3–A4 A heavier, more powerful tenor — less agile than a lyric tenor but capable of sustaining high notes at full volume over large orchestras. Wagnerian and Verdian heroic roles. In rock: Freddie Mercury (though naturally baritone, sang as dramatic tenor), [Steven Tyler].

Spinto Tenor (Lirico Spinto)

Range: B2–C5 Tessitura: D3–B4 Between lyric and dramatic — a lyric tenor with enough weight to handle more demanding material. The workhorse of Italian opera: Cavaradossi (Tosca), Radamès (Aida), Pinkerton (Madama Butterfly).

Countertenor

A male voice type that performs primarily in the alto/mezzo-soprano range using falsetto or developed head voice. A separate classification from the tenor — see countertenor vocal range.


Famous Tenors

Classical Tenors

SingerSubcategoryKnown For
Luciano PavarottiLyric spintoThe definitive operatic tenor of the late 20th century; “high Cs”
Plácido DomingoSpinto / dramaticExtraordinarily wide repertoire; career spanning decades
Enrico CarusoDramatic / lyricThe founding giant of recorded opera tenor
Juan Diego FlórezLight lyric coloraturaRossini specialist; exceptional upper range
Jonas KaufmannDramatic spintoContemporary leading Wagnerian/Verdian tenor

Popular Music Tenors

ArtistRangeSubcategoryNotes
Bruno MarsD3–A5Lyric tenorR&B-influenced; smooth falsetto integration
Michael JacksonA2–F6Lyric tenorPercussive technique; wide falsetto extension
Marvin GayeA2–G5Lyric tenorDefinitive soul falsetto; intimate delivery
[Justin Timberlake]C3–E5Lyric tenorPop/R&B; smooth falsetto integration
Billie Joe ArmstrongD3–B4Lower tenor / baritone-tenor borderPunk-pop delivery
ZaynG#2–E5Lyric tenor (countertenor tendencies)Exceptional falsetto quality
Bruno MarsD3–A5Lyric tenorModern Motown-influenced

Tenor Vocal Range in Hz: Complete Reference

NoteHzSignificance
C3130.8 HzClassical range floor
D3146.8 HzTessitura start
D4–F4293.7–349.2 HzPrimo passaggio zone — chest to mix
A4440.0 HzConcert pitch; mid-tessitura for tenors
B4493.9 HzTessitura ceiling — natural end of comfortable zone
C5523.3 Hz“Tenor C” — classical range ceiling; benchmark note
F5–G5698.5–784 HzSecondo passaggio — mix to full head voice

For a complete Hz table across all voice types, see the vocal range Hz guide.


The High C: Why It Matters

Tenor C — C5 (523.3 Hz) — is the defining vocal landmark for tenors, equivalent to soprano C (C6) for female voices. In operatic tradition, the ability to produce a full, resonant C5 in chest or chest-dominant mixed voice is the mark of a capable dramatic tenor.

The most celebrated instance in opera is the optional high C in “Ah, mes amis” from Donizetti’s La fille du régiment — an aria that contains nine high Cs, and the only aria in the repertoire where the audience explicitly expects and counts them. Juan Diego Flórez and Luciano Pavarotti are most associated with this aria.

In popular music, the equivalent benchmark is a singer’s ability to belt or sustain notes at A4–C5 at full volume — the zone where many pop songs place their climactic moments.


Tenor in Different Contexts

Classical Opera

Tenor roles dominate operatic heroism: Otello (Verdi), Don José (Carmen), Tosca’s Cavaradossi, Manon’s des Grieux. The highest-paid, most celebrated operatic voice type historically. Pavarotti, Domingo, and Caruso are cultural touchstones.

Choral Music

Tenors provide the highest male voice in SATB choirs, carrying melody in four-part settings or singing the third voice in six-part arrangements. The tenor part is typically in the C3–G4 range for comfortable choral singing. Use the choir voice part test to confirm your choral placement.

Popular Music

Most male rock and pop frontmen are tenors — their naturally higher tessitura suits the melodic demands of contemporary songwriting. The tenor voice projects well over amplified bands and holds up under the physical demands of touring.


How to Know If You’re a Tenor

You are likely a tenor if:

  • Your speaking voice sits comfortably in the C3–F3 zone (130.8–174.6 Hz) — check with the voice Hz test
  • You can access A4 (440 Hz) or higher in chest or chest-dominant mix with relative ease
  • Your voice feels most resonant and natural in the E4–A4 zone
  • Standard baritone songs feel consistently comfortable, with the higher passages actually in your sweet spot
  • You can produce a clear, resonant B4–C5 without straining into falsetto

The voice type test provides a definitive classification. The high voice test measures your upper range in Hz. The find my vocal range online tool maps your complete span.


Frequently Asked Questions

What is the tenor vocal range? The classical tenor range is C3 to C5, with a tessitura of D3 to B4. In Hz: 130.8 Hz to 523.3 Hz. The most characteristic zone is E4 to A4 (329.6–440 Hz).

What is tenor C? Tenor C is C5 (523.3 Hz) — one octave above middle C and the traditional upper benchmark for classical tenor voices. The ability to produce this note with full, resonant, chest-quality sound is the defining marker of a capable dramatic tenor.

Is tenor the highest male voice type? In terms of the standard male voice classification system, yes — the tenor is the highest. The countertenor performs in even higher pitch ranges but using falsetto rather than chest voice, making it a distinct voice type that uses a different register.

What famous singers are tenors? Bruno Mars, Michael Jackson, Marvin Gaye, Zayn, Luciano Pavarotti, and Freddie Mercury (who sang as a tenor despite being a natural baritone) are among the most frequently cited.

What is the difference between a lyric and dramatic tenor? A lyric tenor is lighter and more agile — suited to flowing melodic music. A dramatic tenor is heavier and more powerful — suited to demanding operatic and theatrical roles over large orchestras. See tenor vs baritone for the full male voice type comparison.

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