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Uploaded by on Mar 18, 2008

Intermediate student. Somewhat off pitch in places, needs to add color to last note -- vibrato, swell, resonance. http://www.singading.com

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Music

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Uploader Comments (Singading23)

  • Hi Daniel. Thanks for your comments. Yes the vocal exercises are a good idea. I have a variety involving timing, breath support, vowel jaw and lip positions, consonants and so on. Susan

  • lol...the words are mad messy...but her voice is good...reminds me of brightman...keep it up...

  • Right On! She is off pitch and does not hit the notes squarely (attack messy). That will be fixed in time. However, she is a wonderful student and really trying. We fixed a bad glitch, voice breaking,a main concern for a while. Vocal exercises strengthen muscles to hold the high-end note, which she needs to swell and add vibrato as well. Vocal exercises that stress vowels, syllables and consonants will improve her pronunciation. Thanks for your comments.

    Susan

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  • @KiraAso yes. You have a single placement for the voice. It`s not chest or head. it`s one placement. [a forward placement] You support your notes with the diaphragmatic breathing. [stomach area but you can feel it in the back too]. When you reach this level it`s very physical and you get tired since the higher you go the more support you need. This is strict a classical technique based on "appogio". Some teachers teach placements technique... but that`s not the way great opera singers sing/sang.

  • Very very beautiful voice!

  • not bad,big song there!!!

  • Hi there,

    These lessons and videos are just wonderful. I have a burning question for you. I'm just itching to take classical voice lessons and am wondering if in opera/classical vocals those notes that sopranos/mezzo/etc are in head voice (falsetto?) or is that ACTUAL range? From the chest/stomache? Or is there something I'm missing. I just can't imagine being able to hit and F6 or such notes WITHOUT some head voice (falsetto) included. Seems unreal; guess that could be the beauty! Thank you!

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