A Tenor or Bass
To answer the question, the higher voice is the Tenor voice. The ranges for the most common ranges are as follows from low to high : baritone, bass, tenor, alto, soprano. Now, there are more complicated ranges out there that can confuse you such as mezzo, coloratura and so on. But the simplest answer for your question is that tenor voices are higher than bass voices but there are some male voices that range from bass to tenor and even alto as well as some that range from baritone to tenor.
tenor,soprano,alto,baho or bass
(from lowest to highest) baritone, tenor, alto, and finally soprano. -- The lowest mail singing voice is the Bass. then Baritone, then tenor and counter tenor. In a mixed choir its Bass, tenor alto and then soprano
choral music
bass tenor isnt a voice type. tenor is a high male voice while, bass is a lower voice.
Enrique Iglesias is a tenor.
Tenor and bass.
A Tenor or Bass
baritone
soprano - violin, alt - viola, tenor - cello, bass - double bass
Luther Vandross had a tenor voice.
baritone
bass
To answer the question, the higher voice is the Tenor voice. The ranges for the most common ranges are as follows from low to high : baritone, bass, tenor, alto, soprano. Now, there are more complicated ranges out there that can confuse you such as mezzo, coloratura and so on. But the simplest answer for your question is that tenor voices are higher than bass voices but there are some male voices that range from bass to tenor and even alto as well as some that range from baritone to tenor.
Soprano, alto, tenor, and bass.
The main thing between tenor and mezzo-soprano and tenor is the gender of the singer! Tenors are male and mezzo-sopranos are female. In terms of absolute pitch there is quite a difference too as the female voice sings generally an octave above those of men. As far as the order of voice types go, a mezzo-soprano lies between the highest general category of female voices, the soprano and the lowest, the alto. Bridging the gap between female and male voices is the counter-tenor (a male voice type) who sings in falsetto and has cross over in range with the bottom of the female range (and, in fact, much of the female range when the counter-tenor, or even, male-soprano has an extreme extension at the top). Below counter-tenor lies the tenor, the highest of the "full voice" male voice types.