Information for "Singing Voice Dissonance"

Basic information

Display titleSinging Voice Dissonance
Default sort keySinging Voice Dissonance
Page length (in bytes)14,431
Namespace ID0
Page ID76578
Page content languageen - English
Page content modelwikitext
Indexing by robotsAllowed
Number of redirects to this page0
Counted as a content pageYes
Number of subpages of this page0 (0 redirects; 0 non-redirects)

Page protection

EditAllow all users (infinite)
MoveAllow all users (infinite)
DeleteAllow all users (infinite)
View the protection log for this page.

Edit history

Page creatorprefix>Import Bot
Date of page creation21:27, 1 November 2013
Latest editorLequinni (talk | contribs)
Date of latest edit17:52, 5 July 2019
Total number of edits9
Recent number of edits (within past 180 days)0
Recent number of distinct authors0

Page properties

Transcluded templates (5)

Templates used on this page:

SEO properties

Description

Content

Article description: (description)
This attribute controls the content of the description and og:description elements.
Often there's a big difference between a person's singing voice and their speaking voice, sometimes so dramatic that listeners have a hard time believing it's the same individual. When it crops up in fiction it becomes a case of Reality Is Unrealistic: viewers often complain that a character sounds nothing like themselves while singing, even though this is perfectly plausible in real life. It's common, if not expected, for people's tone and inflection to change drastically when they sing, and professional singers are taught to stifle their accents from early on. When a character has two different voice actors; one for music and one for speech, that's a Non-Singing Voice.
Information from Extension:WikiSEO