Not a single one of them "Throat Sing". Tyler is a screech in full voice and Halford is just full voice. Plant has never done it on record. Dio certainly did not. Lol Freddie Mercury singing "On Fire"...nope never heard him sing anything close. So no one on your two lists could do it, we would have heard them do it on record or in a concert ipso factso. Of course Current Steel Panther frontman can do the "throat sing" but if you notice, he cannot do the nuances that Dave Used to be able to do with it.
1. 0:00 - Some easy second octave singing from "Relentless", bottoming at E2.
2. 0:10 - An a cappella-style bass part bottoming at C♯2 from "No Big 'Ting".
3. 0:27 - A line of resonant C2s from "Counter-Blast", preceded by a yelped Eâ™*5 and F♯5.
4. 0:34 - A really cool bassy passage from "Honeybabysweetiedoll", starting around F2 and trailing down to a few D2s, C2s and a short B1.
5. 0:48 - A rapped section down to B1 from the Urban NYC remix of "You're Breathin' It". It's surprising how well Roth pulls off this style!
6. 1:06 - Really strong sung B1s from "Let It All Hang Out", with casual E2s in between.
7. 1:28 - A neat spoken passage from "Slam Dunk!", reaching lots of strong Bâ™*1s and a couple of short G♯1s.
8. 1:43 - An appearance by Roth on the program I Love the '90s, where he imitates Garth Brooks by singing "Friends in Low Places" down the octave, hitting a remarkably strong A1!
9. 1:50 - A long low passage from "If 6 Was 9", with lots of strong dips down to Bâ™*1s and G♯1s, followed by a parlando that starts out around Eâ™*2 and trails down to B1, before finally capping it all off with a line sung up to Eâ™*5!
10. 2:53 - Some seriously sinister lows from "The Trouble with Never", reaching multiple G♯1s and a few short G1s. Roth sounds legitimately intimidating here!
11. 3:26 - Some beefy low singing down to G1 from "Tight".
12. 3:40 - A parlando from "Let It All Hang Out", starting out around some booming B1s and trailing down to multiple G♯1s, as well as touching on a couple of G1s and an F♯1!
13. 4:02 - Multiple A1s and a somewhat quiet but solid F♯1 from "Me Wise Magic"!
14. 4:22 - Roth's lowest note to date: an E1 from "Last Call"!
15. 4:29 - To start off the highs we have some tasteful singing up to A4 from "Tell the Truth", one of Roth's more emotional(!) songs.
16. 4:45 - Great jazzy singing up to some impressively supported A4s from "She's Lookin' Good". This is another style that Roth's voice suits very naturally.
17. 5:04 - Some MANIC singing up to B4 from "It's Showtime!". This is one song that really shows how much energy Roth can channel into a single performance!
18. 5:26 - Belted lines on C5 from "Me Wise Magic", followed by some cleanly sung A4s.
19. 5:40 - A strong Bâ™*4 with a D5 harmony, followed by an epic sustained C5 over an E5 in the backing vocal! From "Baby's on Fire".
20. 5:51 - Some really nice soulful singing on C♯5 from "Night Life", probably one of Roth's best vocal performances.
21. 6:05 - Belting up to C5 and D5 from "Big Train", with one short yelped F5.
22. 6:19 - Some cool singing between B4 and D5 from "Me Wise Magic", as well as a couple of short Eâ™*5s.
23. 6:45 - Intense belting up to Eâ™*5 from "Indeedido".
24. 7:08 - Entire lines on Eâ™*5 from the swing version of "Ice Cream Man"! This version of the song easily beats Van Halen rendition, in my opinion.
25. 7:15 - Better yet, here's an entire line belted on E5 from "Little Texas"! This is immediately followed by some singing up to C5 too, no less.
26. 7:23 - A strong sustained E5 from the ending of "Blacklight".
27. 7:30 - Crazy F5 wails from the ending of "She's My Machine". Almost reminds me of Robert Plant!
28. 7:54 - Solid F♯5s from the last chorus of "Slam Dunk!".
29. 8:10 - And now the big surprise: a sung G5(!) from "Counter-Blast", on an "ooh" vowel too! Naturally, this is immediately followed by several sung D5s too.
30. 8:24 - Roth's highest belted note to date: a short G♯5 yelp from "Weekend with the Babysitter".
31. 8:29 - Some cool sung falsetto G♯5s from "You're No Good". These kinds of fifth octave falsetto screams were pretty common for Roth's early style.