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The 5 V's of Vocal Technique Part 2

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Uploaded by on Oct 6, 2007

www.singersinst.com Get this entire full lesson of "The 5 V's of Vocal Technique" FREE with any order from our website! Call 1-800-847-7545 for private lessons in NYC! Having spent over 40 years in the business as a professional singer and a voice teacher, I know what it takes. I understand the dedication, love of the craft, and plain old fashion hard work required to develop your singing skills and your singing career. You are too important to waste your money on singing lessons that are nothing more than gimmicks and tricks. They don't work. That's why I am offering these singing lesson products. Let me teach you how to perfect your singing skills and be the best singer you can be.

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  • hey SANTA! you need better speakers!

  • man i can't hear what he's saying the sound quality is bad.

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  • This is really unacceptable.

  • @rovingdesertfox - Musical Theater? I'd kill myself first. Rock n Roll singer all the way.

    Don't get me wrong, I liked the covered, open throat sound but it makes for a very limited range. Probably no higher than D above High C (D5). I understand 99% of classical singing for males does not go much higher than High C but having a range that extends at least a half octave above the High C makes everything below it much easier to sing.

  • @RocktheStageNYC He may not need to access any notes higher than the high

    C.  Most operatic tenors top is the C. And, from what I could tell this is not an out-dated technique; just an operatic one. That is a covered sound he was making, because he'd kill himself any other way. Perhaps your area is musical theater where the sound is a little more spread?

  • bravo

  • correction I meant to see "ee and "oo" are the most closed sounds we have and are used for vocal rehabilitation.

    If I came to a lesson and the instructor was holding a baton I'd run the hell out of there.

  • wow this technique is so outdated and obsolete. This singer will always have a limited range using this kind of "covering" technique. He'll never access notes above Tenor high C (C5) in full voice using this technique. Outdated opera training.

  • the "ee" vowel closes the cords. "ee" is the most closed vowel we use.

    That's why its used to rehab the voice. its realigns the cords. If you're hoarse from singing, vocalize some very light "eee's" until the scratchiness goes away.

  • NO TIENEN NI IDEA

  • Me I only sing on k, t, and sometimes z, but I must put my finger in the nose to avoid that the soft palate is higher than the third cervical. That's the point. And my teacher makes me vocalise only with "shit". It helps you negociate good articulation with lowering the rear throat without losing the support of diaphragmic bell.

    For singing lesson CALL 45593299420043

  • hahahah :D :D :D

    you're my hero CE818!!! :D

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