Definitely support but I only listened to about ten seconds. What you actually need to do is find kens lah scales and post yourself doing them in chest and bridging it will be easier to get a feel for what your doing than a song is
These are techniques I was taught which show improvement right off the bat. Off course, you need to be singing and practicing on a continuous basis for it to really do you good.
1. Sing on the vowels - Your oohs, aahs, eees - try to emphasize those. 2. "Chew" your words IOW get your jaw moving and opened up. 3. Don't try to sing a high note "on the note" - slide up into it. Ken has a video titled "How To Sing Any Song - Voice Lessons - Ken Tamplin Vocal Academy" - type in that exact title - which talks about vowel sounds and transitioning up to a higher note. He of course, explains it better than I do lol. 4. Mark where you'll be taking a breath in the song. 5. Try to include resonance from the nasal cavity. Of course, you don't want to "live" there exclusively.
Thanks!) That's the point. Sometimes I find myself doing really well with scales, but singing a song is much more complex. Do we take a breath (while singing a song) through the nose or through the mouth?
Answers
1. Sing on the vowels - Your oohs, aahs, eees - try to emphasize those.
2. "Chew" your words IOW get your jaw moving and opened up.
3. Don't try to sing a high note "on the note" - slide up into it. Ken has a video titled "How To Sing Any Song - Voice Lessons - Ken Tamplin Vocal Academy" - type in that exact title - which talks about vowel sounds and transitioning up to a higher note. He of course, explains it better than I do lol.
4. Mark where you'll be taking a breath in the song.
5. Try to include resonance from the nasal cavity. Of course, you don't want to "live" there exclusively.
That's the point. Sometimes I find myself doing really well with scales, but singing a song is much more complex.
Do we take a breath (while singing a song) through the nose or through the mouth?
But on the other hand, doing it through the mouth dries the chords a little bit.