Understand your timbre (and where it tends to shine).
This tool summarizes the “color” of your voice—how clear, warm, bright, stable, or variable it sounds in a short clip. Timbre affects how you come across on calls and how your voice sits when you sing.

Why timbre matters in life and in song
Pitch tells you what note you’re on. Timbre is how that note “reads”—clear vs airy, warm vs bright, stable vs wobbly. In speech, timbre can change how confident, calm, or energetic you sound. In singing, it affects style and blend.
The result is intentionally practical: it’s a snapshot from one clip, not a label. Change your distance to the mic, soften consonants, or reduce room echo and you may see the profile shift—because the tool is measuring what the microphone captures.
Speech snapshot
Useful for calls and meetings: clarity/brightness often change a “muffled vs crisp” impression.
Singing snapshot
See whether your clip trends warmer/darker or brighter/sharper, plus how stable your pitch movement looks.
Privacy-first by default
Analysis runs in your browser. Unless a feature explicitly says otherwise, we don’t upload your raw audio.
What you get when you rate my voice
A concrete set of fields you can interpret, screenshot, and compare across recordings.

Relative scores (5 dimensions)
Clarity, warmth, brightness, variation, and pitch movement. These are relative inside the tool—not a universal rating—so they’re best used to compare your own clips (different mic distance, different room, different speaking style).
How to rate my voice

1) Record a clean clip
Allow the microphone, then speak naturally (or hum) for 5–15 seconds. Keep a steady volume. Headphones help prevent speaker echo. If you hear reverb, move closer to the mic and lower room noise.

2) Compare like-for-like
Because scores are relative, compare clips under similar conditions. For example: (A) 10 cm from the mic vs (B) 30 cm away. Or “soft speech” vs “projected speech.” This makes the result more informative than chasing a single number.

3) Fix common device issues
Windows: enable browser mic permission + select the correct input device. macOS: allow mic in Privacy & Security. iOS: use Safari and allow mic when prompted. If pitch jumps around, use headphones and avoid playing audio through speakers.
How people use the timbre snapshot
Short, practical reasons users try it for speech and singing.

I used it to compare two setups: built‑in laptop mic vs a headset. The clarity score and the pitch curve made it obvious which one sounded more consistent on calls.
Mina S.
Office worker / Uses for meetings
"I wanted a quick way to check whether I sound muffled or crisp on Zoom. Comparing two recordings helped more than any generic advice."
Alex
Remote worker / Uses for meetings
"For singing, the warm/bright impression matched what teachers tell me. It’s useful as a simple mirror—especially when I change technique."
Jordan
Hobby singer / Uses for singing
"I like that it warns me when the clip is too quiet. That alone saved me from over-interpreting bad recordings."
Sam
Curious user / First-time user
