Group 1

Day 1:

Introduce yourself in the forum! Remember you can post a video of yourself practicing and singing at any time to get feedback from Julia and your fellow singers! This is a space of growth and discovery and we welcome ALL singers. We are here to encourage you on your musical journey! 

An Explanation...

What is Whistle Voice?

Whistle voice is a distinct register above head voice. It utilizes less closure of the cords, and allows for maximum stretching of the cords, without thickness. There is a distinct aural difference between whistle register and head voice. It is weaker, thinner, and has its own particular set of overtones. A coordinated whistle voice is one where both whistle action and head voice register join to make a fuller tone in extreme top tones. It is important to note that whistle voice is a register, not a series of pitches. This being said, whistle voice can also be practiced lower in the voice than extreme high notes.

Why is it important?

We learn to stretch the cords without antagonism from the TA muscle. Healthy functioning of whistle register indicates cooperation and fine tuning of muscular control vs. release in the intrinsic laryngeal musculature. The coordination of Whistle Register to the Head Voice creates easier, freer, fuller, more beautiful high notes.

Watch video: Whistle Voice Intensive Day 1- part 1

 

N.B. if you are completely new to whistle register, please make sure you DO NOT do your regular warm up before commencing on these exercises!!

 

Daily Exercise:

Watch Video: Whistle Voice Intensive Day 1- part 2

 

Isolating the pure head voice and thin edge function of cords. No grabbing with the tongue. The tongue should remain gently arched upwards, like in an “ng” position. If it is grabbing backwards, you are engaging unnecessary muscles. Larynx should be in a relaxed, downward position. Do not actively support, or try to contract the abdominal muscles. Let them remain relaxed. Also, do not put excess breath pressure or breath in the sound. Minimal airflow is best.

 

1. Light humming
2. Staccato descending on [u]

Day 2:

Watch Video: Whistle Voice Intensive Day 2 Exercise

 

Finding the Edge of the register between head and whistle.

Reminder: No grabbing with the tongue. The tongue should remain gently arched upwards, like in an “ng” position. If it is grabbing backwards, you are engaging unnecessary muscles. Larynx should be in a relaxed, downward position. Do not actively support, or try to contract the abdominal muscles. Let them remain relaxed. Also, do not put excess breath pressure or breath in the sound. Minimal airflow is best.

1. Light Humming
2. Staccato descending on [u]
3. Tiny breaks in passaggio to lighter function on [u]

 

Day 3:

Watch Video: Whistle Voice Intensive Day 3 Exercise

 

Reminder: No grabbing with the tongue. The tongue should remain gently arched upwards, like in an “ng” position. If it is grabbing backwards, you are engaging unnecessary muscles. Larynx should be in a relaxed, downward position. Do not actively support, or try to contract the abdominal muscles. Let them remain relaxed. Also, do not put excess breath pressure or breath in the sound. Minimal airflow is best.

 

1. Light Humming
2. Staccato descending on [u]
3. Tiny breaks in passaggio to lighter function on [u]

4. Start with an inhale on a higher, but not super high pitch. The reason this works is because the glottis must remain slightly open to breath in air, while you are trying to make a pitch. This approximates how the vocal cords function in whistle register when we are using our normal exhale mechanism.

 

Day 4

Watch Video: Whistle Voice Intensive Day 4 Exercise

 

Finding the ways into Whistle
.

 

1. Light Humming
2. Staccato descending on [u]
3. Tiny breaks in passaggio to lighter function on [u]

4. Start with an inhale on a higher, but not super high pitch. The reason this works is because the glottis must remain slightly open to breath in air, while you are trying to make a pitch. This approximates how the vocal cords function in whistle register when we are using our normal exhale mechanism.

5. Gentle Fry to Whistle Register. On octaves or 2 octave leaps.

Day 5

Watch Video: Whistle Voice Intensive Day 5 Exercise

 

Finding the ways into Whistle (pt.2) 
.

 

1. Light Humming
2. Staccato descending on [u]
3. Tiny breaks in passaggio to lighter function on [u]

4. Start with an inhale on a higher, but not super high pitch. The reason this works is because the glottis must remain slightly open to breath in air, while you are trying to make a pitch. This approximates how the vocal cords function in whistle register when we are using our normal exhale mechanism.

5. Gentle Fry to Whistle Register. On octaves or 2 octave leaps.

6. Little cuperto [u] and absolutely no support or body. Can begin on a top tone, or a 2 octave break upwards.

Day 6

Watch Video:  Whistle Voice Intensive Day 6 Exercise

 

Finding the ways into Whistle (pt.3) 
.

1. Light Humming
2. Staccato descending on [u]
3. Tiny breaks in passaggio to lighter function on [u]

4. Start with an inhale on a higher, but not super high pitch. The reason this works is because the glottis must remain slightly open to breath in air, while you are trying to make a pitch. This approximates how the vocal cords function in whistle register when we are using our normal exhale mechanism.

5. Gentle Fry to Whistle Register. On octaves or 2 octave leaps.

6. Little cuperto [u] and absolutely no support or body. Can begin on a top tone, or a 2 octave break upwards.

7. Tongue out and try to sing relaxed on ascending slides, allowing the voice to “break off”

Day 7

Watch Video: Whistle Voice Intensive Day 7 Exercise

 

Finding the ways into Whistle (pt.4) 
.

 

1. Light Humming
2. Staccato descending on [u]
3. Tiny breaks in passaggio to lighter function on [u]

4. Start with an inhale on a higher, but not super high pitch. The reason this works is because the glottis must remain slightly open to breath in air, while you are trying to make a pitch. This approximates how the vocal cords function in whistle register when we are using our normal exhale mechanism.

5. Gentle Fry to Whistle Register. On octaves or 2 octave leaps.

6. Little cuperto [u] and absolutely no support or body. Can begin on a top tone, or a 2 octave break upwards.

7. Tongue out and try to sing relaxed on ascending slides, allowing the voice to “break off”

8. Little Mouse Larynx exercise. Feeling a very very slight squeeze on the larynx as if you were a little mouse making a squeak. (please don’t misunderstand this to mean ACTUALLy squeezing your larynx
 it is a very slight and gentle sensation).

Day 8

Integration

We are learning new exercises each day, so it is important to give your body some time to integrate. Play around with variations of the exercises and ways “into” the whistle register. Make it fun!! The body responds better if you can play at this. Experiment by imitating sounds or characters you feel represent a whistle register sound. Once you get the sensation, try playing around by staying in the register on different pitches.

Finding the ways into Whistle (pt.4) 
.

1. Light Humming
2. Staccato descending on [u]
3. Tiny breaks in passaggio to lighter function on [u]

4. Start with an inhale on a higher, but not super high pitch. The reason this works is because the glottis must remain slightly open to breath in air, while you are trying to make a pitch. This approximates how the vocal cords function in whistle register when we are using our normal exhale mechanism.

5. Gentle Fry to Whistle Register. On octaves or 2 octave leaps.

6. Little cuperto [u] and absolutely no support or body. Can begin on a top tone, or a 2 octave break upwards.

7. Tongue out and try to sing relaxed on ascending slides, allowing the voice to “break off”

8. Little Mouse Larynx exercise. Feeling a very very slight squeeze on the larynx as if you were a little mouse making a squeak. (please don’t misunderstand this to mean ACTUALLy squeezing your larynx
 it is a very slight and gentle sensation).

9. PLAY!

Day 9

Watch Video: Whistle Voice Intensive Day 9 Exercise

 

1. Light Humming
2. Staccato descending on [u]
3. Tiny breaks in passaggio to lighter function on [u]

 

4. Start with an inhale on a higher, but not super high pitch. The reason this works is because the glottis must remain slightly open to breath in air, while you are trying to make a pitch. This approximates how the vocal cords function in whistle register when we are using our normal exhale mechanism.

5. Gentle Fry to Whistle Register. On octaves or 2 octave leaps.

6. Little cuperto [u] and absolutely no support or body. Can begin on a top tone, or a 2 octave break upwards.

7. Tongue out and try to sing relaxed on ascending slides, allowing the voice to “break off”

8. Little Mouse Larynx exercise. Feeling a very very slight squeeze on the larynx as if you were a little mouse making a squeak. (please don’t misunderstand this to mean ACTUALLy squeezing your larynx
 it is a very slight and gentle sensation).

9. Play!

10: Pitched exercise in whistle register:

    a. 5-4-3-2-1
    b. 1-2-3-2-1

Day 10

Today we begin integrating the whistle function with the full voice!

Watch Video: Whistle Voice Intensive Day 10 Exercises

 

1. Light Humming
2. Staccato descending on [u]
3. Tiny breaks in passaggio to lighter function on [u]

4: Pitched exercise in whistle register:

    a. 5-4-3-2-1
    b. 1-2-3-2-1

 

5. Complete a simple warm up of 10 minutes before commencing with the next exercises!
        a.) [zi-ja-a-zi-ja-a-zi] 5-8-5-3-5-3-1
        b.) supported descending triplets on [vja] 5-6-5 [vja] 4-5-4 [vja]3-4-3 [vja] 2-3-2 [vja]1
        

6. Fully supported oooo arpeggio: za-a-o-o-u-o-o-o-a (1-3-5-8-10-8-5-3-1)

7. Then advance exercise above to holding the top (scale number 10) and gradually opening the oo embouchure. (watch video)!

 

Prepare questions for the tonebase voice LIVESTREAM tomorrow at 11amPST!!

 

Day 11

LIVESTREAM CHECK IN!!!

Bring your questions, your wins, and your struggles! We will trouble shoot and address everything!

11amPST

Link in the LIVESTREAM Forum!!

 

Today we begin integrating the whistle function with the full voice!

Watch Video: Whistle Voice Intensive Day 11 Exercise

 

1. Light Humming
2. Staccato descending on [u]
3. Tiny breaks in passaggio to lighter function on [u]

 

5: Pitched exercise in whistle register:

    a. 5-4-3-2-1
    b. 1-2-3-2-1

5. Complete a simple warm up of 10 minutes before commencing with the next exercises!
        a.) [zi-ja-a-zi-ja-a-zi] 5-8-5-3-5-3-1
        b.) supported descending triplets on [vja] 5-6-5 [vja] 4-5-4 [vja]3-4-3 [vja] 2-3-2 [vja]1

6. Fully supported oooo arpeggio: za-a-o-o-u-o-o-o-a (1-3-5-8-10-8-5-3-1)

7. Then advance exercise above to holding the top (scale number 10) and gradually opening the oo embouchure. (watch video)!

8.  2 + octave arpeggio with embouchure rounded. Begin in very bottom of voice with breathy open chest sound.
Za (1-3-5-8-10-12-15-17-15-12-10-8-5-3-1)

Day 12:

Yesterday was a big day! With a LIVESTREAM and an assignment.

Take the day to practice the skills you have discovered so far and incorporate the tips you heard on the LIVE!

 

Day 13:

Today we incorporate how to integrate the whistle register work into the upper passaggio

Watch Video: Whistle Voice Intensive Day 13 Exercise

 

1. Light Humming
2. Staccato descending on [u]
3. Tiny breaks in passaggio to lighter function on [u]

 

4: Pitched exercise in whistle register:

    a. 5-4-3-2-1
    b. 1-2-3-2-1

5. Complete a simple warm up of 10 minutes before commencing with the next exercises!
        a.) [zi-ja-a-zi-ja-a-zi] 5-8-5-3-5-3-1
        b.) supported descending triplets on [vja] 5-6-5 [vja] 4-5-4 [vja]3-4-3 [vja] 2-3-2 [vja]1

6. Fully supported oooo arpeggio: za-a-o-o-u-o-o-o-a (1-3-5-8-10-8-5-3-1)

7. Then advance exercise above to holding the top (scale number 10) and gradually opening the oo embouchure. (watch video)!

8.  2 + octave arpeggio with embouchure rounded. Begin in very bottom of voice with breathy open chest sound.
Za (1-3-5-8-10-12-15-17-15-12-10-8-5-3-1)

9. 2nd PASSAGIO INTEGRATION: Whistle to pure head. You WILL hear a click or a crack into full voice! Trains less pressed phonation in passaggio. PLEASE WATCH VIDEO DEMO!

Day 14

Today we integrate whistle voice coordination into repertoire

1. Light Humming
2. Staccato descending on [u]
3. Tiny breaks in passaggio to lighter function on [u]

4: Pitched exercise in whistle register:

    a. 5-4-3-2-1
    b. 1-2-3-2-1

5. Complete a simple warm up of 10 minutes before commencing with the next exercises!
        a.) [zi-ja-a-zi-ja-a-zi] 5-8-5-3-5-3-1
        b.) supported descending triplets on [vja] 5-6-5 [vja] 4-5-4 [vja]3-4-3 [vja] 2-3-2 [vja]1

6. Fully supported oooo arpeggio: za-a-o-o-u-o-o-o-a (1-3-5-8-10-8-5-3-1)

7. Then advance exercise above to holding the top (scale number 10) and gradually opening the oo embouchure. (watch video)!

8.  2 + octave arpeggio with embouchure rounded. Begin in very bottom of voice with breathy open chest sound.
Za (1-3-5-8-10-12-15-17-15-12-10-8-5-3-1)

9. 2nd PASSAGIO INTEGRATION: Whistle to pure head. You WILL hear a click or a crack into full voice! Trains less pressed phonation in passaggio. PLEASE WATCH VIDEO DEMO!

10. Pick a phrase of an aria or song that has a high note you would like to coordinate better. First approach it using pure whistle, then coordinated whistle, then (if it is low enough), full voice.  Share your videos in the group!

71 replies

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    • margaret_gottlieb
    • 9 mths ago
    • Reported - view

    Hi Everyone! 

    I am so excited for this course!!! My name is Margaret Gottlieb, I am a soprano. Here is my day one video, 

      • JohnEric_Robinson
      • 9 mths ago
      • Reported - view

       Good to see you!

      I wonder if it would make a difference if you let your head relax down?

      It's amazing how it looks like nothing is happening, as though someone else was singing.

      I look forward to taking this two week intensive with you!

      Best wishes,

      John-Eric

      • Voice with Julia LLC
      • Julia
      • 9 mths ago
      • Reported - view

       Hi Margaret! Nice to meet you! Thanks for your submission- it seems to me that although you are being soft in your dynamic, there is still too much mass and heavy mechanism in the sound. I believe there may be some back of neck tension that is prohibiting the sound from freeing up. Allow your neck to relax and fee a slightly higher point of resonance with the hum, especially from the first note. If you can feel a point between your eyebrows, this will be a good guideline for a sensation of correct head tone balance. - Julia

      • margaret_gottlieb
      • 9 mths ago
      • Reported - view

       Thank you so much for your awesome comments. I’m working on these things. I am at a workshop until sunday , where the internet isn’t great, so it’s a bit hard for me to post videos. But i am practicing relaxing my neck and finding a lighter feel 

    • JohnEric_Robinson
    • 9 mths ago
    • Reported - view

    Day 1!

    I, too, am psyched.

    It doesn't seem right that men aren't supported in exploring higher ranges in classical repertoire. Does it?

    Here's exercise 1: 

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1c2mYDFDvUnpcfMev8fG7ALJE5_Wu_vTo/view?usp=sharing

    And exercise 2:

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1q5sODsf5tL0dJN9XYwidCpHwYJxBq-xh/view?usp=sharing

      • JohnEric_Robinson
      • 9 mths ago
      • Reported - view

       These whistle tones feel magical to me. I'm not sure I'm doing them, but I sometimes felt something shifted and the phonating felt effortless.

      • Voice with Julia LLC
      • Julia
      • 9 mths ago
      • Reported - view

       Hi John! Nice to meet you! I love that you’re exploring this register! One thing I would watch, the bottom pitch in exercise one is inadvertently thickening, which creates a bit of an imbalance, and you have to detach to re-registrate the upper note. Try mentally keeping the bottom pitch higher with each repetition to keep the stretch of the cords.

      • JohnEric_Robinson
      • 9 mths ago
      • Reported - view

       Thank you!

      By the way, I go by John-Eric.

      Thank you

    • JohnEric_Robinson
    • 9 mths ago
    • Reported - view
      • Voice with Julia LLC
      • Julia
      • 9 mths ago
      • Reported - view

       Hi John- yes you are doing this right! Do you notice how the whistle function frees up in a different way and gets a bird-like vibrato? This is the hallmark of a whistle register function! Keep going!

      • JohnEric_Robinson
      • 9 mths ago
      • Reported - view

       Hurray!

      Thank you,

      -- John-Eric

    • Coffee-drinking soprano, trainer of voices and tonebase voice content lead
    • Heidi_Vass
    • 9 mths ago
    • Reported - view

    So fun to see your submissions.. Julia will be in to check on your progress. :)

    • JohnEric_Robinson
    • 9 mths ago
    • Reported - view

    Thank you, Heidi

    • JohnEric_Robinson
    • 9 mths ago
    • Reported - view

    Day 4: Thank you for modeling this, despite it being challenging for you. It's wonderful to have an instructor model not just what they're great at but also places they struggle.

    The French will sometimes say <<oui>> on an inhale. I find it a wonderfully efficient and expressive idiom. It adds a color I haven't heard in German, English, Italian, or Spanish, the other languages I speak.

    It's precisely what you're talking about here, though not always as high as you're inviting us to go.

      • Voice with Julia LLC
      • Julia
      • 9 mths ago
      • Reported - view

      Thanks for sharing, John-Eric!

    • Letizia
    • 9 mths ago
    • Reported - view

    Hello there!

    I have a couple of questions that can also be answered in the recorded livestream.

    1- what is the difference between whistle register and falsetto? What's the reason why can't women sing the falsetto but males can sing the whistle register?

    2- Can I use the whistle register as a muscular setting to sing dynamics such as sottovoce and pp even in non-"sopracuti" pitches?

    Thank you so much: this TWI is useful to me because I've never had a real lyric soprano as a singing teacher and singing sopracuti has always been something dangerous!

    Ciao! 

    đŸŒžđŸ˜ŽâœŒđŸ»

      • Voice with Julia LLC
      • Julia
      • 9 mths ago
      • Reported - view

       Hi Letizia, Thank you for your questions! In short, any terms we use for the voice can mean anything, so when some people use falsetto and whistle register, they may mean something different than I do. For me, falsetto and whistle register are one and the same. It is a way of registration the voice where the full mass of the cord is not engaged in phonation. To this end, we can even term whistle register, falsetto. 
       

      eventually (after months of study), the sensations you feel in your throat when in whistle register will start to reset your other registers. When this happens, you will feel the natural protection (cuperto) of the voice when singing in all registers. When singing piano, it won’t be in full whistle, but the voice will tend more towards that setup. Either way, it is a very important setup for the unification of the whole instrument. 
       

      Can’t wait to hear about your experiments!

      • Letizia
      • 9 mths ago
      • Reported - view

       
      Thank you for your previous answer.
      As a technique, to lengthen the vocal tract to make high notes, does one need to lower his head or raise his chin?
      One teacher told me to think the high notes as projected lower and lower by lowering my head while others said I had to raise my chin to free my throat 😳
      Is there a precise technique that works in real life?
      Thank you!

      đŸŒžđŸ˜ŽâœŒđŸ»

      • Voice with Julia LLC
      • Julia
      • 9 mths ago
      • Reported - view

       In general, through your upper passaggio, you want the back of your neck to be lengthened which may feel a bit like slightly looking down (especially how we are all used to our text neck positions today). However, as you get up to the upper notes of your range (usually for sopranos around Bb-B) you need to allow the neck to be free on the top tones. Feeling a sense that you are looking to the balcony in the opera house on those notes. Hope that helps! All should be done with freedom and not an enforcing of position.

    • JohnEric_Robinson
    • 9 mths ago
    • Reported - view
      • Voice with Julia LLC
      • Julia
      • 9 mths ago
      • Reported - view

       So I like the ease that you have on this, but one question- do you feel the phonation is super easy and light when you go from the glottal fry into the pitch? Are you able to take the pitch any higher- maybe an octave higher? Play around a bit and see.

    • JohnEric_Robinson
    • 9 mths ago
    • Reported - view

    Day 5: Sour Lemon

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Fb3-SR4gz46sraP2rFcr3z86lO9NndRd/view?usp=sharing

    Could you share more about the tongue position for this? I got your previous instructions for "ng" with the tongue high in back, but I'm not sure how this one differs.

      • Voice with Julia LLC
      • Julia
      • 9 mths ago
      • Reported - view

       This sounds pretty good, but as in the creaky door, I’m curious if you can have any more variance with the pitch? Perhaps a bit higher? 
       

      The tongue should be gently arched and in this specific exercise, you may feel the highest point of the arch aligning with your canines or pre-molars depending. The arch should be gently on this as the embouchure is closed. Don’t expand the pharynx to achieve a higher arch with the tongue.

      • JohnEric_Robinson
      • 9 mths ago
      • Reported - view

       Thank you! That’s very helpful. That is right near the top of my range. About a semitone higher and no more sound comes out, unless I do something to tighten something—I seem to be able to get higher if I—I don’t know what it is. I will post a link to a video.

      • JohnEric_Robinson
      • 9 mths ago
      • Reported - view

       Here I am, bent over double: in this position I reach my highest notes

      https://drive.google.com/file/d/1HxeUwXVSmWNaIEaTHA9YB733_n6rWXSi/view?usp=sharing

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