Practice
Use Your Vocal Range Test for Karaoke Keys
How to use your vocal range result to choose safer, easier karaoke keys without forcing high notes.
Start With the Song's Highest Note
Many karaoke problems come from a song's highest note sitting above your stable range. After a vocal range test, compare your result with the song's peak notes.
Do not use a single touched high note as the full standard. Lyrics, rhythm, breath, and repeated high notes can make the same pitch much harder.
Keep Two or Three Semitones of Margin
If your test reaches G4 once, a chorus that hits G4 repeatedly may still feel too high. Lowering the key by two or three semitones often makes the performance more stable.
Low notes matter too. If the key is too low, volume and clarity can disappear.
Decide Which Register You Will Use
If your vocal range test includes head voice or falsetto, decide whether the song actually allows that sound.
Some songs become easier when you use head voice or mix. Other songs need a stronger tone, so the highest falsetto note should not set the key by itself.
Quick Key Change Rules
- Chorus high notes feel strained: lower by one to three semitones.
- Verse low notes disappear: raise by one or two semitones.
- High notes work once but not by the end: lower the key and keep margin.
- Both low and high notes feel wrong: choose another song or arrangement.
Related pages
Start
How to Use the Vocal Range Test
A short guide to using Oniki Check: microphone setup, testing flow, and how to read your lowest and highest notes.
Updated 2026-07-08
Basics
Vocal Range, Tessitura, and Voice Type
Understand the difference between vocal range, tessitura, chest voice, head voice, and passaggio before reading your test result.
Updated 2026-07-08
Reference
Test Your Vocal Range Without Strain
Warmup, singing, rest, and safety notes for using an online vocal range test without hurting your voice.
Updated 2026-07-08