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Category: Vocal Technique (Page 2 of 2)

The Truth About Your Authentic Sound

We mean well, but voice teachers are often sending students off on a quixotic quest to find “their authentic voice.”

Theater singers of all kinds have spent a lot of time on this search for what their “sound” is.

When you’re a theater singer, your job is to embody multiple different ego identities. You don’t want to be a singular brand because that limits the myriad expressions you’re capable of.

Biologically, empirically, and scientifically, you already showed up on the planet with a singular voice that has never been and will never be repeated. Your particular combination of lungs, larynx, and vocal tract is your own.

Vibrato Summer Camp ?️

Opening Session

Vibrato can be one of the more mysterious aspects of singing, and when it’s not going how you want, it can be a source of a lot of frustration and anxiety.

In this video from my childhood back yard, I share a little of my vibrato back story and show you a way of perceiving vibrato that’s been very helpful to me.

The Reasons Vibrato Issues Are Hard to Work On

When a teacher or director shares an opinion about a vocal function like vibrato, it can feel like someone just made a comment about your physicality.

And that’s because your vibrato (and all vocal function) is indeed part of your physicality.

In this video, I’ll walk you through some of the primary roadblocks that stop singers from singing to the other side where there’s choice, facility, confidence, and skill.

When you use evidence-based ways to bring freedom and release to your singing and you show up and do the things, and you gain skill, freedom, and the joy to share.

How to Free Up Vibrato That’s Wider Than You Want It to Be

In this video, I’ll take you through steps that have helped me to get my voice moving in smooth and efficient ways and how to calibrate your vibrato.

If you’re experiencing a wider vibrato wave than you’d like, this video will give you some tools to start working with that.

You’ll learn how to troubleshoot areas that might be holding on and how to collaborate and cooperate with your body to get things coordinating well.

How to Free Up Vibrato That’s Quicker Than You Want It To Be

We’re talking about the 2 principle areas to address when your vibrato is quicker than you want it to be — the vocal tract and the breath system.

2 Simple Confidence Builders for Vocal Transitions (featuring morning mucus ?️)

Here are two more things to think about as you navigate coordinations in your voice that can be on the trickier side.

In this video, I talk about how to check in with your breath management and dynamic support to see if that may be an issue in what’s happening at the vocal fold level, and then I also show you a way to grease the wheels around your particular transitional zones.

You’ll also get the benefit of hearing my early morning vocal cobwebs, and how I work through these. ?️ 🙂

One Exercise to Dissolve Your Head/Chest Divide

“Head Voice” and “Chest Voice” are just two of the many terms that continue to confuse singers.

In this video, I teach you one exercise that helps. You’ll understand how your voice is a continuum of possibilities, not cubbyholes or categories of abrupt change (unless you want that for stylistic purposes.)

This is a contemporary theater singer take on the classic messa di voce — it helps you discover how your voice transitions from mode 2 (head/thin) to mode 1 (chest/thick) and then back to mode 2.

If you’ve never done an exercise like this, you will probably encounter some speed bumps along the way.

Stay with it, and just notice where the abrupt changes happen.

Over time, your laryngeal muscles, your brain, and neurons will all start to coordinate to hand over phonatory responsibility.

The Vowels You Can Always Depend On

A big misunderstanding theater singers have is when we are told to sing theater music like we speak.

We then dive into our material, trying to sing the words the way we say them, and we run into huge problems when we are singing in a vocal mode that doesn’t agree with the vowel we’re trying to force out of our mouths.

In this video, I’m going to talk to you about two ways of understanding thicker fold vocal coordinations, or metallic modes.

I’m also going to teach you about the very straightforward ways of understanding these modes and the vowels you can use that always agree with them.

This understanding goes a really long way in helping you to maintain consistency in registration and to avoid vocal breaks and cracks where you don’t want them.

You can check out Complete Vocal Technique’s research site here: https://cvtresearch.com/

Why You Suffer Vocal Breakups Part 1 (It’s Not You, It’s [ee])

One of the biggest lies singers suffer from believing is that there’s something inherently wrong with your voice because you’re struggling with cracking or your voice making abrupt transitions where you want them to be smooth.

There are tons of factors that affect why this may be happening, but an understanding of vowels and your vocal tract shape goes a long way in helping you navigate tricky places.

In this video, I’m going to break down two vowels that are major culprits in causing vocal squeeze and cracking — [i]/ee and [u]/oo.

In upcoming videos, I’ll tell you about vowels that almost always help with thicker fold modes in the higher notes, as well as other things to check like body use and breath management if you’re struggling with abrupt vocal breaks where you’re wanting the register to remain consistent.

It’s Not You, It’s [ee] — Vocal Breakups and the Truth About Where the Cracks Really Come From

I got to sing “Marry Me a Little” in a production of Putting it Together at South Coast Repertory about 12 years go, and one night I cracked. Bad.

If you know the song, it’s at the end when it goes “Sooooomeooooone!”

It was an A-flat. Emotion had choked me up, and I was surprised by a sound that came out of my face not unlike an adorable video I saw recently of a donkey reunitng with the girl who raised it as a foal.

The performance was connected and honest, so I moved on.

BUT, the next night you know what happened. 

Oh no. Here comes that note. Why did it crack last night? How do I KEEP it from cracking tonight? More space? More breath? More everything? Yes. More everything. Go!

And, crack again. Only this time self-conscious and NOT connected.

[Enter singer neurosis death spiral.]

There was even a review on a ticketing site lamenting how I started the song so well but just didn’t have the chops to finish it.

(Another reviewer said I was upstaged by my mullet haircut — I didn’t even know I HAD a mullet. They’re in again, right? Or is that over?)

(I guess I was getting a little “party in the back” there.)

Anyway, I didn’t know what the problem was. I didn’t know how to leverage physiology and acoustics to ensure I wouldn’t surprise an audience like a screaming goat video. 

And this wasn’t an isolated incident.

I’ve cracked like a wounded beast singing an aria in a grad school concerto competition hearing.

I pummeled myself with merciless self-talk through many undergrad productions,

and I even cracked once when I sang “I feeeeel you, Johaaaaannnnaaaaaa!” with the orchestra all blasting during a Sweeney Todd in LA. (A musical director I worked with later reminded me of the fact as he had been in the audience. So kind.)

So, I’ve felt the pain of the crack.

And I didn’t get clear tools in my own body as to why this was happening until my late 30s. And when I did, I was ready to preach the vocal register acoustic agreement gospel to anyone who’d listen. 

One myth singers beat themselves up with is that if they’re cracking or experiencing rough transitions where they want them to be smooth, something clearly has to be wrong with them and their voice. Their instrument is faulty.

False.

While yes, sometimes you may need to make an appointment with a laryngologist and get a scope to make sure everything’s scope-acetic, the vast majority of the time, the events we call cracks or breaks happen because of one of two things:

Register confusion

&/or

Vocal tract shape. 

With register confusion, you’re unfamiliar with the categories of sounds your vocal folds make, and you don’t have a ready recognition of what they feel and sound like inside your own head. 

And with vocal tract shape, that just means that the different parts of your throat and mouth have a direct effect on what’s going on in the vocal folds.

(and PS, different registers only cooperate with certain vowels. Some folks say [i/ee] is their favorite vowel, but it’s not going to love you back on every note in every mode.)

It’s enough to get your ears and brain all twisted in a knot, so this week, I’m going to break down the most common snags we hit when it comes to understanding registration and how to collaborate with physics and your physiology.

(It’s almost always counterintuitive and opposite your brain’s perception of what needs to happen.) 

You can follow these mini-lessons on my YouTube channel this week. And while you’re at it, you can check out last week’s videos about how to prepare your audition packets.

The takeaway from this is that almost any technical snag you hit is solve-able, and if you have an evidence-based solution to try, you can show up on a consistent basis, try the thing, and then you get better. 

Now apply this vocal truth to your wider life. I’m working on it, too. 

Example: I sat down to structure a teaching and class schedule for the summer, and my body got all hot, I broke into a mild sweat, and my heart rate went up.

A deep deep part of me that fears making a decision and going with it was responding. Still don’t understand it all, but I was like, “Oh, there’s something deeper holding me back from finishing this very practical task.”

That’s often the way.

And the good thing is that when you just start taking small, practical actions, deeper things unearth themselves in their own time. It’s when you’re in action dunked in sweet compassion that things become clear. 

So, join me on the YouTube (or Instagram or Facebook), I’ll be posting this info on all of the human psychology manipulation platforms. 

In the meantime, sing something, please ?. Because there’s only one you, and folks need to hear the story only you can sing.

Love MUCH,

Dan

PS Here’s “Marry Me a Little” from a faculty recital last year (without the crack this time). Accompanied by the inimitable (and my piano boyfriend) Scott Nicholas.

PPS Here’s that sweet donkey and the girl who raised him video.

PPPS And here’s the YouTube playlist on audition prep so far. Like and subscribe. You know what to do!

Make Your Connection Through Musical Clues and Get Into Your Character’s Point of View

The musical language of a song has so much to tell us about what’s going on inside the character. It’s one of the richest places to look for clues about what’s happening in your internal weather.

When you’re aware of what the composer’s up to, just listening to the collaborating music does so much work for you.

After this layer of work, you’re more than ready so slip in behind the character’s point of view — to use the information you’ve gathered about their life and their circumstances and the musical language to then take a look from behind their eyeballs.

How to Craft Your Singular Connection to Your Material

After you’ve done your preliminary objective work about the material, you’re ready to see how the images in the narrative connect to you personally and on an authentic level.

In this video, I’ll walk you through a few phrases from Sunday in the Park with George to show you the first steps of crafting your own intimate imagery world, and to start to get the images of the song into your own heart so that when you sing it, it’s coming from inside your own experience.

There’s really nothing more captivating than a human sharing their heart in story and song, and I found this way of working to be very straightforward, satisfying, and useful.

It’s also one of the most direct ways to let your body teach your voice what to do moment to moment and style style.

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