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Amazing Grace........AGAIN

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Uploaded by on Nov 9, 2008

Silver River is broadcasting this video on Monday, 16th March 2008 at 6.30pm on Sky One. Those of you in England CHECK IT OUT, lol?

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Music

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Standard YouTube License

  • likes, 9 dislikes

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Uploader Comments (yuichituba)

  • dude you've gotten so much better since your last video. i'm majorly impressed.

  • @yellowjello42 Thanks so much man! I just put this together for this British TV show. So I didn't practice much (I don't usually). I'm sure if I did it would be much better than this, but I have other things I need to practice :P

    Thanks so much for watching :)

  • THAT WAS SIK YO! good job, may i ask how long it generally takes to develop an overtone like that?

  • @ThePunPunisher Thanks man. It took me about a year to get it, working on it on and off. But I think that was just me, lol. I've taught people and they started getting a sound within 10 minutes.

  • @yuichituba lol kool and I'm sure you must be busy so I'd like to thank you for your time and response I appreciate it.

  • @ThePunPunisher You're welcome :)

Top Comments

  • this is freaking amazing

  • Hey. I have a question. How can you control the pitch of the harmonic note without changing the pitch of your voice? Im getting stuck on that.

    Your tutorial video was excellent. I love singing overtones down the halls in my school :D

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All Comments (75)

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  • Lmao I'm going to be honest I thought this was crap, it's my first time hearing singing like this and it just sounded silly, and then i actually heard the song in the background and it was actually kinda cool

  • How do you get the overtone to have so much volume?

  • oh my god..... This is..... Your my new hero.

  • Super! I'm working on "formants" as a practical explanation for bending notes on on harmonica. By whistling the intended note, then taking the "tweet" away, continue the turbulance (whispered vowel): that mouth shape then bends the note of this whispered vowel. Searching "professor carl vowels" -- my thoughts on English vowels are helpful to some. Technically, these are voiceless fricative approximants along the velar-palatal continuum. And that's saying a mouthful : ).

    Any thoughts, thnks

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