[
US
/ˈbɛɹəˌtoʊn/
]
[ UK /bˈæɹɪtˌəʊn/ ]
[ UK /bˈæɹɪtˌəʊn/ ]
NOUN
- the second lowest adult male singing voice
- the second lowest brass wind instrument
- a male singer
ADJECTIVE
-
lower in range than tenor and higher than bass
a baritone voice
baritone oboe
How To Use baritone In A Sentence
- It should be a baritone scoring game and the unfortunate should be in early disceptation for a top 3 pick. Xml's Blinklist.com
- A prepossessing performer with a beautiful baritone, Murray is tall, blond and Midwestern - looking.
- He carried the splashy, two-fisted style of great New Orleans pianists like Professor Longhair toward modern-jazz dissonance, then back toward propulsive barrelhouse; he sang the lyrics, but only after he had whooped and scat-sung, from baritone to falsetto. Jazzfest: “Thank God I Made It” - ArtsBeat Blog - NYTimes.com
- In most cases, each song is given melodic depth by MacKaye's baritone guitar and Farina's stripped-kit drumming.
- Your teachers were all baritones and even your tenor voice has a distinct baritonal touch to it.
- Scott Hendricks is an equally flexible, believable actor, a passionate advocate for freedom with his strong, virile baritone.
- I had a reason to expect much from this work, based on other compositions of his, especially his outstanding Edgar Allan Poe song cycle for baritone and piano Lenoriana.
- Armed with his banjo, tinwhistle, poetry, stagecraft and his magnificent baritone voice, Tommy has been mesmerising audiences for more than forty years.
- Mr. Elling's treatments of standards (like "Stairway to the Stars") are amazingly straightforward and heartfelt — and his baritone is deep and warm. Comebacks and Co-Conspirators
- This exceptional but as yet uncelebrated baritone rejoices in a lean, spinning, perfectly focused tone of unfailing natural beauty and vibrancy, while his grasp of Verdi style and phrasing is all but complete.