🎶 The “Connected Line” Mini-Challenge

Welcome to the Connected Line Mini-Challenge — a one-week exploration of legato, the art of seamless, flowing connection between tones. Over seven days, you’ll strengthen the relationship between breath, vowel, and resonance to transform your singing from note-by-note effort into effortless, expressive lines. Whether you’re refining technique or rediscovering your natural flow, this challenge will help you build the consistency, freedom, and artistry that define truly beautiful legato.
 

BONUS Inspiration: Start with this Legato Course on tonebase with the inspiring Michael Sumuel!!!

 

Day 1 – Define the Line
đź§  Concept Focus: What is legato? Explore airflow as the unbroken thread.
🎧 Prompt: Choose one melodic phrase (from any song or vocalise). Sing it on a single vowel and record it. Listen back for any “bumps” or disconnects.
đź’¬ Forum Post: Share your chosen phrase and what you noticed.

 


 

Day 2 – Breath and Flow
🧠 Concept Focus: Manage the exhale. Legato lives in the breath’s continuum, not its start.
🎶 Exercise: Inhale silently, then release an “sss” for 12 counts → 16 → 20. Then sing a short phrase maintaining that same even energy.
đź’¬ Post Prompt: What did you discover about your breath energy?

 


 

Day 3 – Vowel Connection
đź§  Concept Focus: Unifying vowel shapes through resonance tracking.
🎶 Exercise: Sing a five-note scale [i-e-a-o-u] on a single breath. Feel the resonance “travel,” not reset.
đź’¬ Challenge: Post a short clip (10 sec) demonstrating your smoothest vowel sequence.

 


 

Day 4 – Legato Across Intervals
đź§  Concept Focus: Maintaining line through skips and leaps.
🎶 Exercise: Use a leap-based vocalise (e.g., arpeggios). Aim to make it sound as if it were stepwise.
đź’¬ Prompt: Where do you tend to lose connection in leaps?

 


 

Day 5 – Text and Tone
đź§  Concept Focus: Marrying diction and legato.
🎶 Exercise: Sing one line of texted repertoire (e.g., “Caro mio ben,” “Amarilli mia bella,” or a hymn). Keep the consonants fluid and the vowels spinning.
đź’¬ Prompt: Which consonants challenge your legato most?

 


 

Day 6 – Emotional Line
🧠 Concept Focus: Legato as phrasing — shaping tension and release.
🎶 Exercise: Choose a 4-bar phrase. Record two takes: one purely technical, one expressive. Compare how phrasing influences connection.
đź’¬ Prompt: Post your reflection on how emotion impacts legato.

 


 

Day 7 – Integration + Reflection
🎯 Final Challenge: Record the same phrase you used on Day 1 — now with everything integrated.
đź’¬ Forum Prompt: What changed in your sound and awareness over the week?

40 replies

null
    • Raymond_Gornik
    • 1 mth ago
    • Reported - view

    Hi, sounded like the air didn't quite get started. This is Mary Did You Know.

    I've watched the 1st 2 videos Michael and will add 2 more tomorrow.

     

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

       Excellent observations, Ray! What are your takeaways so far from Michael's course?

    • Michelle
    • 1 mth ago
    • Reported - view

    Monday: There were some moments where I wasn't completely smooth when changing pitch, but I think these were minor; I didn't quite go to the end of the phrase with my breath...in other words it ended but I didn't intentionally end the phrase.

    https://youtu.be/JlzCb_OP9ak

      • Professor Emeritus Nursing
      • emdnurse
      • 1 mth ago
      • Reported - view

       That sounded lovely, Michelle!  It is tricky going from a lower note to a higher one, especially one several intervals away. I guess that is why we always have to get our breath "underneath" us for support.

      • Michelle
      • 1 mth ago
      • Reported - view

       Thanks so much, Ellie. It so often comes down to breath, doesn't it?

      • Professor Emeritus Nursing
      • emdnurse
      • 1 mth ago
      • Reported - view

       It surely does! I also play flute, so that helps, but breath control needs to be constantly thought about I guess, until it becomes second nature as we get more experienced.

    • Jessica_Pizano
    • 1 mth ago
    • Reported - view

    Monday post: Sorry I am a bit late, but I am on the east coast. I sang the first B portion (the song's form is AABB) of Vaughn William's The Sky Above the Roof. I feel like this entire piece really requires legato as the tempo is lento. I used the vowel "Ah" as I find it the easiest to transition into my upper register. In terms of the actual recording, I did fairly well with breath support until the very end of the phrase where there is a longer time between breaths along with being in a lower register (goes down to C4). 

      • Michelle
      • 1 mth ago
      • Reported - view

       So pretty, Jessica. 

      • Jessica_Pizano
      • 1 mth ago
      • Reported - view

      Aww, thank you. That is so nice of you to say!

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

       This is great! Beautiful ethereal quality :) I would be curious to see what would happen if you shifted the vowels to a closed vowel in your middle range and saved your beautiful "ah" for the top. 

      • Jessica_Pizano
      • 1 mth ago
      • Reported - view

       Thank you! I can certainly play with this. I have always found the E vowel easiest in my lower register so perhaps moving between E and Ah in this could work for me. I will have to play with that.

    • Professor Emeritus Nursing
    • emdnurse
    • 1 mth ago
    • Reported - view

    I find my voice sounds too "airy". How does one eventually get that nice, strong, clear sound? It's also a challenge to change from lower to higher notes, especially if someone is watching OR I am making a recording of myself (ya just FREEZE up ). https://youtube.com/shorts/n7LUb2OPTpY?feature=share
     

      • Jessica_Pizano
      • 1 mth ago
      • Reported - view

       There seems to be an issue with your video. I went to listen and it said it was unavailable.

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

       Yay! Love hearing you again :) Beautiful warmth in this tone and excellent consistency. 

    • Professor Emeritus Nursing
    • emdnurse
    • 1 mth ago
    • Reported - view

    Oh Yikes! Must have done something wrong. Here it is again.

      • Michelle
      • 1 mth ago
      • Reported - view

       So beautiful, Ellie! 

      • Jessica_Pizano
      • 1 mth ago
      • Reported - view

       Very nice. I don't think your voice sounds airy at all. I think it is more about controlling air flow so that you are not using so much and therefore run out of breath so quickly. I know that my teacher often has me work through a difficult phrase on a lip trill to help learn how far you can actually go in one breath. After this is trained well, then you can move back to the vowel or actual words. Keep it up though, your voice is beautiful.

      • Professor Emeritus Nursing
      • emdnurse
      • 1 mth ago
      • Reported - view

      Good advice. THANKS!

    • rebecca_sheridan
    • 1 mth ago
    • Reported - view

    my teacher is trying to get me to sing through exercises with the same volume. is this considered legato?

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

       yes! That is another way of framing "legato." Consistency ;) 

    • Michelle
    • 1 mth ago
    • Reported - view

    Day 2 Prompt: Breath energy

    I think this is one place where having asthma has taught me a lot: exhales are wonderful gifts! I work on smooth relaxed exhales, and so my "breath energy" tends to be smooth and consistent because it is something I practice a lot!

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

       and your cardio health and other fitness activities can't hurt ;) 

      • Michelle
      • 1 mth ago
      • Reported - view

       And understanding the feeling toward the end of the exhale (which used to cause me anxiety as it felt so much like an asthma attack) as something normal and expected, and perhaps even to be embraced, really helped me to learn to relax and keep the breath moving even at the extreme of my breath-range.

    • Michelle
    • 1 mth ago
    • Reported - view

    For the day 3 prompt: is the 5-note scale to be sung on a single vowel? 

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

       yes! That said, you can challenge yourself and use a combination of vowels OR a vowel-consonant combination. If you bring modifications to articulation, they carry their own challenges ;) 

Content aside

  • 1 Likes
  • 1 mth agoLast active
  • 40Replies
  • 36Views
  • 6 Following