These two exercises start to extend the range of your Better Voice, by using the six-step sequence on a run of five notes (actually the first five notes of a major scale, but if scales aren’t familiar to you just think of them as next-door notes). What you’re working towards is keeping the same bright, head-focused quality in your voice every time you switch it on, and in whatever part of your vocal range.
By practising on different starting notes you will gradually be piecing together a range over which your Better Voice operates.
You may be aware that in some places there is a noticeable break in your voice between adjacent notes. We will deal with these in Unit 3. For now, as before, do the exercises on sequences of notes that don’t involve a break.
Here’s a reminder of the six-step sequence:
Step 1: Hum each note
Step 2: Hum to aah on each note
Step 3: Friendly phrases
Step 4: Initial hum then continuous aah
Step 5: Continuous aah
Step 6: Separate aah on each note
This is a repeat of the previous exercise but with the notes in reverse.
On notes that fall in pitch it’s particularly important to visualise your voice stretching out horizontally in front of your face. This helps to stop it ‘collapsing’ back into your throat and sounding dull on the lower notes. (If you’re a singer it will also help to stop you going flat when singing falling intervals or phrases.)
These two exercises start to extend the range of your Better Voice, by using the six-step sequence on a run of five notes (actually the first five notes of a major scale, but if scales aren’t familiar to you just think of them as next-door notes). What you’re working towards is keeping the same bright, head-focused quality in your voice every time you switch it on, and in whatever part of your vocal range.
By practising on different starting notes you will gradually be piecing together a range over which your Better Voice operates.
You may be aware that in some places there is a noticeable break in your voice between adjacent notes. We will deal with these in Unit 3. For now, as before, do the exercises on sequences of notes that don’t involve a break.
Here’s a reminder of the six-step sequence:
Step 1: Hum each note
Step 2: Hum to aah on each note
Step 3: Friendly phrases
Step 4: Initial hum then continuous aah
Step 5: Continuous aah
Step 6: Separate aah on each note
This is a repeat of the previous exercise but with the notes in reverse.
On notes that fall in pitch it’s particularly important to visualise your voice stretching out horizontally in front of your face. This helps to stop it ‘collapsing’ back into your throat and sounding dull on the lower notes. (If you’re a singer it will also help to stop you going flat when singing falling intervals or phrases.)