Your Vocal Journey Questions Answered
The best part of my job is helping singers with their specific questions or concerns about their vocal journey. With that in mind, if you have a question about singing, let me know. I would love to help you trouble shoot and get you on track toward your next vocal victory!
41 replies
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Hi Heidi, is this where I should ask a question? Hope so cause here it is! My Lip Trill often doesn't start or starts then immediately stops. This is the first time I've tried this type of exercise so I'm writing it off to being a novice. It seems my core tends to collapse sometimes during the trill. When doing the hiss my core is fine, the amount of air being expelled is more controlled. I can hiss for 20 seconds at this time. Trying the lip trill results in all the air blurting out and the trill turns into a gasp.
Please let me know where I should post these questions and the videos.
Thanks, Ray
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Hi Heidi,
I've got tension issues: mouth, neck and shoulders all could be more relaxed when I sing. Also my breathing is too fast and not quiet. I guess these are not uncommon issues. Your insight will be most appreciated.
Yixi
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Hi ! I think this post would belong under this thread. I am planning to do a recital in September, and I wanted to sing three pieces. So far the suggestion that you gave me, Heidi was really awesome and I am going to sing this as one of the pieces. (Torna Vezzosa Fillide) I have been having a hard time finding two more pieces to start. I wanted to do one English, and one French, and I was hoping that either one of those would be an Aria as opposed to an art song ( short, easier-ish aria) If Heidi, or anyone has any suggestions! Please Let me know!!!!! Bonus points if one has some light, more simple coloratura passages.
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Hi Heidi,
I am feeling a bit stuck in my vocal training journey and I would like some feedback. I've been taking voice and opera lessons since I was 6, but I started in Russia and worked a lot with post-soviet teachers and learned a lot of ineffective technique (together with some emotional abuse). Now I am trying to restructure my approach to training around techniques that work for me, but it hasn't been easy. My latest opera teacher is Canadian, so her approach was much gentler and I have discovered a few things that helped me, but the puzzle is still incomplete.
I am a huge (according to my latest teacher) Wagnerian soprano with a higher than usual breath capacity and was always trained as a mezzo, so I have a substantial lower register and can go quite low.
I am deeply fascinated with upper register, however, and put extensive training into developing my upper register ever since I've learned I have it. But while singing in lower register on full breath support is effortless, putting head voice on breath support at some point turns into a torture fest.
My teacher noticed that every time I am trying to take notes on the upper limits of my register, my throat clutches, tongue muscles over-tense and the sound I produce comes out strained and not extremely pleasant (think of a high pressure water hose). When I try practicing it by myself, I sound like a banshee. The more I try to put the head voice on my enormous breath reserve the worse it gets and at some point my vocal chords inevitably produce a nasty scratch. No amount of metaphors help: I've been told to imagine a tunnel or a limousine (?) at the back of my head, a fountain with a ball on top of it, and I've been instructed to relax (isn't helping). I've heard how free and effortless the upper register supposed to sound (my teacher demonstrated it) and I am clearly not 'getting it'.
I tried taking upper notes with a wider yawn, singing into my teeth by raising smiling muscles into a ferocious snarl (helps a bit, but isn't very beautiful).
I know I have head and whistle register notes because I can hit them by humming, but I just can't put them on breath support in the way that would sound the way it supposed to. What am I doing wrong?
Thanks in advance!Alia
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Hi! Question! I was wondering if anyone knew of pre recorded patterns/ scales for coloratura agility , like the ones mentioned in the bel canto skill set. I use the piano as well, but sometimes I want to practice standing up and could use a little extra help
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Hi, I know classical singing don’t really use mixed voice, but I would love to know how to achieve it and if there are any tutorials on the website.
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I've had the same teacher for most of my voice journey and he's been incredible for my growth! But...recently I got to do a 2-day workshop 1:1 with another singer I really admire and I am learning all these new concepts that I've never even heard of before. I'm a tenor and have been taught to cover for the last 14+ years...and all the sudden, now I'm being introduced to 'girare' and it's like I'm learning to sing from scratch again. This new teacher has very limited availability. Not sure where to go from here...
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Hi
First of all, the Tonebase Voice platform has been absolutely incredible and the content is outstanding, so wanted to give a huge thank you!!
My question is regarding the pros and cons of a vocal degree, which I know is one of THE questions for singers!
My dream goal that I’m working towards is to sing sacred/choral music in a touring professional choir, and my main question is whether I can reach this goal with private lessons + Tonebase courses + other resources, or if it would be more effective/necessary to develop my voice through a formal degree program (and if so, how to pick a school that's a good fit!).
To give some context/background, I’m 25 and have been playing musical instruments and singing since I’ve been little. I was fortunate to grow up in a very musical family, with both my parents being music majors, and heard incredible choral repertoire every Sunday from the cathedral choir, and then sang in this choir once I was old enough. I still volunteer in church choirs and recently made the switch from alto to soprano when out of nowhere I suddenly realized I can sing well above the staff lol :) My music theory and sight singing is solid, but I don’t have much experience with solo work or with foreign languages (besides Latin). I’ve also been taking private voice lessons with an excellent voice teacher for about a year. I started a Bachelor’s degree in liberal arts several years ago, but didn’t end up finishing it for various circumstances, so I would be looking at Bachelor’s vocal degrees.
I know enough of the music world to know that music doesn’t pay well, so I wouldn’t be looking for a financial ROI (which is what most people point to as the main downside/caution regarding music degrees). I’m currently working and have built up some solid professional skills outside of music, and my husband has an excellent job/career and is fully supportive in my endeavors, so I’m confident in my ability to support myself financially both through and after a vocal degree.
TLDR: I know I can get quite far and have made great progress already without a vocal degree (and it's completely sufficient for singing at an amateur/hobby level), but the thing I get stuck on is that I want to sing at a professional level in a choir, and pretty much everyone that I’ve seen sing professionally has a vocal degree and subsequently that “trained” edge to their voice. The financial piece is fortunately not as much of a concern for me, so it would be primarily whether a vocal degree is the right path to reach my goals and continue to develop my voice in a professional capacity.
Any advice or perspective would be greatly appreciated! Thanks :)
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Hi there!
These days I completely lost my voice due to seasonal illness or what here in Italy is: "preso freddo".
Do you have any advice for recovery?
Thanks, ciao! 🌞😎✌🏻
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SUCH a common question. Lots of singers have very specific strategies. The scientific answer tends to be:
1. vocal rest - no talking or singing, just give your voice the time to FULLY heal
2. hydrate - drink lots of water
3. steam - you can do this with specific steaming devices or just breath over a pot of boiling water.
4. If it's an emergency and you need to get your voice back quickly, some physicians (at least here in the US) will give you a steroid. That will knock out the swelling BUT it's VERY MUCH a band-aid and not a real fix, so you have to be careful with that as it can make you feel like you are able to sing fully before you are completely healed.
Now I'll tell you MY little hacks (I am NOT a Doctor, so take this with a grain of salt). In addition to the steaming, rest and hydration I add the following:
1. Manuka Honey
2. Neti Pot multiple times a day
3. Depending on the source of my laryngitis, I also use homeopathic supplements that include Viitamin C, Zinc, Elderberry, Slippery Elm (throat coat tea)
4. I also take a daily Vitamin D supplement and that usually helps my immune system system stay fairly strong, so that can mitigate the effects of sickness.
Hope this helps and I hope you get well quickly !