The Fallacy of Vocal “Tips and Tricks”

People looking for help with their voice regularly ask me “tips and tricks” so they can try to DIY fix a specific issue or to improve their voice. But here’s the money shot up-front:

Without having worked with someone’s voice, there are no tips or tricks one can give that can guarantee improvement

This is a key reason we can’t learn to sing from a book. There are of course helpful things that can be written down, and when a person is going through the process of training their voice, we can discuss more complex topics verbally/in the written word. But the specific set of technical issues that obstruct one singer are typically completely different from singer to singer. Trying to assess that via the written word or just on the say-so of the singer themselves is tantamount to impossible.

Let me give you some examples the kinds of emails I get looking for written advice to help their voice:

A: “I can reach high notes easily, but I sing high notes more chorally and I’m not able to belt them like in my chest voice. Are able to give me any tips as to how I might achieve this?”

B: “My range up high is good but my lower notes tend to get quite wispy and weak. Do you have any tricks I can use to solve this?

C: “My voice sounds OK down low but when I sing higher it sounds strained and often cracks. Can you tell me some quick fixes on how to solve this?”

These are all generalised variations on genuine requests I’ve received over the years. While I totally understand the desire ask for suggestions to fix one’s voice, the belief that one’s voice can be unlocked just by some string of magic words on a slip of paper/on a screen, is enormously unhelpful. Let’s explain why, starting with the problem of the diagnosis: Continue reading “The Fallacy of Vocal “Tips and Tricks””

Coronavirus, Covid & Singing: How Covid-19 Appears to Affect The Singing Voice

In the last 2-3 months, I’ve worked with a number of clients online and spoken with a number of people who have had coronavirus/Covid-19 (either tested positive for, or strongly suspected to have had). While none of these cases have been hospitalised, all have experienced quite severe upper respiratory symptoms that have lingered for quite some time. In working with these voices, certain patterns are beginning to emerge in relation to how this virus affects the voice.

But before we get going…

DISCLAIMER: The following is my anecdotal opinion and should not be considered a definitive medical finding. I am not a medical professional, nor am I seeking to provide medical advice. Anything contained in this article should not be construed as such.

This article is intended as a preliminary discussion on patterns I have noticed in the last 2-3 months in relation to my voice teaching practice, specifically in relation to those who have/are suspected to have contracted coronavirus/Covid-19. I also reserve the right to update this article with any new developments/re-evaluations that are encountered as the situation progresses.

Let’s look at Covid-19 data through the lens of a singer/voice user

Continue reading “Coronavirus, Covid & Singing: How Covid-19 Appears to Affect The Singing Voice”

Something weird that online singing lessons do better than in-person lessons

Since the coronavirus pandemic we’ve switched all sessions to 100% online – and I noticed something unexpected – and very excellent – happened when we made the switch.

Obviously there are differences between online and in-person lessons. Travel time isn’t needed for online, you can have your sessions in the comfort of your own home, use your own instruments/ear, etc. Singers pitching also gets much better through following the vocal exercises without as much assistance from the piano.

The whole point of these exercises is to build technical facility and vocal balance into a singers’ voice. This involves building new habits whilst unpicking old pre-dispositions where they force their voice into one place or another. This better vocal balance is all about smooth and even connection from bottom to top, free from said bad habits/forcing of the voice, so that the singer’s voice behaves how it’s meant to behave. In turn, whatever they want to sing, they can just launch into unimpeded.

Now I’ve been aware of all of these differences for a while, but it wasn’t until everyone went online that I noticed something profoundly different, made obvious by those who moved from only ever having had in-person singing lessons, to online singing lessons: Continue reading “Something weird that online singing lessons do better than in-person lessons”

Home Recording: First Steps

Last week’s article on building a Recording Studio on a Budget was overwhelmingly popular, so I thought for those of you who have taken the plunge into recording yourself (either now or recently), we’d dive into some basic baby steps you can use to get better vocal takes.

These steps are prepatory in nature but will also help take your voice to a “record ready” standard for when you ARE ready to hit record.

Gear and Gear Setup

1. Use a stand for your mic and a pop-filter

Firstly, having your mic on a stand will help you keep your hands free for singing. Secondly, this will enable you to more easily use a pop-filter.

You can buy a pop-filter from Amazon via this link

Microphones work by detecting changes in pressure across a diaphragm. Certain consonants create very strong and aggressive pressure waves, like the ‘p’s in the word ‘pop’. These can hit the surface of the microphone diaphragm hard enough to create unwanted popping noises in the recording.

A pop filter is a simple device that sits in front of the microphone and breaks up such incoming pressure waves. It’s typically a mesh material (like nylon tights, etc) stretched over a frame. This will reduce or eliminate those nasty unwanted pops, thus improving the quality of your recordings.

NOTE: If you ended up buying the Rode M1 I recommended in my recording studio on a budget article, this already has some pop-filter capacity built in (but an external one is always recommended). And an external pop filter is also a very helpful tool in another way… Continue reading “Home Recording: First Steps”

The Art of Re-Building a Voice

I spend a lot of time working on voices. Often we are building them from the ground-up, teaching the instrument how to behave in a new way.

This can be slow for voices that are more stubborn, have suffered from health issues, etc. The process can also be surprisingly quick, as voices typically suck up new muscle memory/behaviour patterns when it’s good for them.

The whole process involves training and co-ordinating the vocal folds, the vocal tract, the larynx, and a host of other components.

Intro: Re-building a voice

However, there is a smaller sub-section of people I work with where I am not building their voice for the first time, but re-building their voice.

Here I’m talking about people who previously had a functioning voice – perhaps even a trained one – that have undergone some kind of vocal trauma that has radically shifted how their instrument behaves and operates. This shift is often so severe that the individual barely recognises their voice anymore (psychologically or mechanically/acoustically) and so they are at a loss how to proceed. Continue reading “The Art of Re-Building a Voice”

My thoughts on Auto-tune: Is auto-tune cheating?

When musicians talk about auto-tune, they often do so with great disdain. For guitarists, bassists, drummers, pianists, especially those of a more traditional or even classical persuasion, it can come across as an ENORMOUS cheat to use it.

Personally, I have no issue with auto-tune as a tool.

What I do I have an issue with, is how some people choose to use auto-tune. Let me explain and hopefully it will become clear.

What is auto-tune?

Auto-tune is a category of software used (typically) in music production. Algorithms in the software are able to identify the individual sung pitches in an audio clip.

The vocal line is then typically expressed graphically on-screen, much like a line graph.

The software enables the various portions of this graph to dragged, dropped, cut, re-shaped, and moved around to suit the producer’s desire. This then results in a flexible alteration of the originally sung melody. One can make it extremely subtle and organic, or very extreme in it’s effect.

In short, auto-tune is software that enables flexible re-arrangement of already sung melody notes, without additional vocal re-takes. Continue reading “My thoughts on Auto-tune: Is auto-tune cheating?”