Ariana Grande is a good singer. On final night time’s SNL, she pretended to be a horrible one.
Ariana Grande is, notably, an excellent singer; she has a four-octave vary that she makes use of for R&B ballads, pop bangers, and musical-theater showstoppers. However her stint internet hosting Saturday Evening Reside final night time additionally proved that Grande is nice at being a unhealthy singer. In one of many episode’s first sketches, she performed a bridesmaid performing a parody of Sabrina Carpenter’s “Espresso.” The overarching joke was that Grande and her fellow members of the marriage social gathering had been recounting, by way of music, their bachelorette journey, throughout which the bride (performed by Chloe Fineman) connected with a person who was not her fiancé. However essentially the most amusing a part of the sketch was Grande singing purposely off-key, demonstrating the atonality of an novice together with her flat notes and lackluster supply.
In her opening monologue, Grande instantly lied. “I’m gonna preserve it low-key tonight, I promise,” she stated, earlier than crooning “I’m not going to siiiiing” and hitting a excessive observe. The extent of her apparent use of irony shouldn’t be overstated; all through the night time, Grande sang consistently. However she by no means sounded the identical, proof that her celebrated voice is not only a musical instrument but additionally a comedy instrument, one she will modulate for laughs—a trait that places her within the firm of a few of SNL’s best forged members.
Her monologue singing was the closest to the Grande we anticipate—the delicate and clear tone showcased on her albums, like on this yr’s Everlasting Sunshine. In the course of the opening, she additionally busted out musical impressions of Britney Spears, Miley Cyrus, and Gwen Stefani—a expertise she displayed the earlier time she hosted SNL, in 2016. She utilized this mimicry later within the night time with a spot-on Celine Dion, lovingly mocking Dion’s unusual “Sunday Evening Soccer” promo. Grande’s Dion was, as a substitute, shilling for Final Combating Championship, and the humor got here from the way in which she transferred the singer’s assured French Canadian enthusiasm to the extraordinarily violent world of combined martial arts.
Mimicry was only one side of how Grande manipulated her voice over the course of the episode. In “My Finest Pal’s Home” she performed a woman in ponytails who began out by singing a reasonably innocuous tune about how a lot she cherished the odor of her greatest good friend’s home. When her good friend’s dad turned out to be a serial killer, concern crept into her inflection as she took inventory of all of the indicators she’d missed, together with a frozen head within the fridge and a shaker stuffed with enamel, and Grande used the pristine high quality of her voice to intensify the bizarreness of the scenario.
Later she exhibited her higher register in “Castrati,” a sketch set in Renaissance Italy by which she portrayed a castrato named Antonio. Castrati had been a part of a bunch of males who had been castrated so they may retain their excessive voices, and each time Grande opened her mouth, she launched a phenomenal however terrified sound. All of the whereas, Antonio’s dad and mom, performed by ex-cast members Maya Rudolph and Andy Samberg, pitched to a skeptical prince the advantages of the castration course of—as proved by Antonio’s angelic voice.
It was becoming that this sketch occurred alongside Rudolph and Samberg, two performers who made their SNL mark with musical moments that discovered humor not simply within the punch strains however within the vocal supply. As a member of the Lonely Island, the musical trio that launched him to notoriety, Samberg highlighted how humor can come from emphasizing the suitable phrases. On final week’s episode, the Lonely Island returned for “Sushi Glory Gap,” its first new SNL video in six years, and one of many funniest strains was Samberg’s understated and disaffected repetition of the phrase hear us out.
In the meantime, viewers want solely to revisit Rudolph’s traditional “Nationwide Anthem” sketch from 2006 to see how her voice is a device. Again then she performed a neighborhood contest winner who received to sing the nationwide anthem on the World Collection. Her take was full of outlandish riffs and odd pronunciation; Rudolph can clearly belt, however she made each lyric a comedic meal, turning the music right into a deconstruction of what a nasty singer thinks good singing is.
Each comedians are additionally aware of how their voices can be utilized to reinforce humor even when not singing. Take Rudolph’s impression of Kamala Harris, which is predicated not solely on the bodily resemblance between the 2 but additionally on Rudolph’s skill to seek out the nuances within the presidential candidate’s cadence. In Samberg’s case, he nearly at all times appears like Andy Samberg, however he makes use of the innate goofiness of his cadence for comedic acquire.
That brings us again to Grande, who clearly understands the intricacies of her voice. Earlier this yr, she appeared on the Podcrushed podcast and appeared to alter her talking voice throughout the interview. In a TikTok remark, she defined how she deliberately shifts her register to maintain her vocal chords wholesome, including that it’s “typically relying on how a lot singing” she is doing. That thoughtfulness was obvious final night time. Each time Grande opened her mouth, a rigorously crafted sound got here out. More often than not it was stunning, however she understood the sketch was generally funnier when she sang terribly.