Surelyican 04:51, 27 August 2006 (UTC) OK, help me with this? Other whistler register singers can anunciate in the seventh octave too, like Rachel Farrell, who covered Riperton's Here We Go, in which the lines "here we go" are in the whistle register. An Encyclopedia is supposed to be objective, right? We all know breast cancer & dying at a young age are "sad." Is there really a need to explicity state that in a reference work? The sentence What sets Riperton apart from other whistle register singers such as Mariah Carey, is her ability to enuciate in the higher octaves is slightly POV and not entirely supported: Mariah Carey can anunciate in the whistle register, although she does it less often than Riperton: she clearly anunciates "there goes my heart again" in There Goes My Heart and "so amazing" in Yours. Without a doubt, Minnie replaces the part by voice where Mariah only lets out a whiff of air. The Carey comparison is ONLY for her ability to sing in "whistle pitch". EliasAlucard 11:52, (UTC) Not necessarily. A link to some confirmation site would be nice. You guys sure this is true? I mean, it sounds like complete bull to me. George 21:09, 15 September 2005 (UTC) Seriously, what's up with this Mariah Carey thing? I've never heard Mariah sing anywhere near Minnie. I say link to the whistle register singers category and let it be at that. Also, why all the discussion of other singers? This is an article about Ripperton, not all the other singers who use the whistle register. Vocal ability: Can we get some citation for the "15% of sopranos" figure? I've never seen it in the literature."She was just 31 years old" is something said on TV tribute specials, not in encyclopedias. It's a bit illogical - what's up with those first three paragraphs? - and a bit sentimental for an encyclopedia. Since this seems to be a busy talk page, I thought I'd ask for comments. I think it's generally ok, but it needs a couple of edits. I'm slowly working my way through the articles on vocal tpoics, and I've wandered into this one. Someone fixed it, so thank you! tharsaile 19:12, 23 January 2007 (UTC) Voice section and general cleanups What are the correct dates? tharsaile 14:41, 13 September 2006 (UTC) In the trivia section, it says that a Japanese singer covered Lovin'You in 2006 before she died in 2005? There's got to be a better way to word that. 22 External links modified (February 2018).17 Cause of death as originally reported.16 Vocal ability and descriptions removed.10 'Singing' & 'hitting a pitch' are completely different.4 Why I feel the statement is important.This article has not yet received a rating on the project's importance scale. Women in Music Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Music Template:WikiProject Women in Music Women in music articles If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion and see a list of open tasks. This article is within the scope of WikiProject Women in Music, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of Women in music on Wikipedia. This article has been rated as High-importance on the project's importance scale. ![]() This article has been rated as C-Class on the project's quality scale. R&B and Soul Music Wikipedia:WikiProject R&B and Soul Music Template:WikiProject R&B and Soul Music R&B and Soul Music articles ![]() “Hot Tottie” is another so-so track, despite the guest appearance of Jay-Z, who delivers a surprisingly uninspired verse maybe he’s had one too many cameos of late.This article is within the scope of WikiProject R&B and Soul Music, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of R&B and Soul Music on Wikipedia. Songs like “DJ Got Us Fallin’ in Love,” featuring Pitbull, will get you moving on the dance floor, but that has more to do with the standard club beat than Usher, who makes little impact on this song. Raymond,” it’s another uneven effort from an artist talented enough to do better. So, with only seven new tracks, it’s more like an EP, and like “Raymond V. Raymond,” and the remix to “Somebody to Love,” which features protege Justin Bieber and is on Bieber’s album. It has two songs you’ve already heard - his current hit, “There Goes My Baby,” which was on “Raymond V. Raymond.” But “Versus” isn’t all new material. “Versus” is a nine-song project that will be available as a single disc or part of a deluxe, rereleased version of “Raymond V. Raymond,” but he’s back with another album - kind of. It’s only been a few months since Usher released “Raymond V.
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