I've tried several times to learn to sing in the past . . . once by taking two lessons with a vocal instructor, and once buying a 'Teach yourself to sing in 10 easy steps' book. Both times they gave me a bunch of vocal exercises to do (singing scales, making fire engine noises, crap like that) that were so horribly boring I gave up in short order. Lately I've been trying to learn to sing through a different approach - just finding a song I like and belting it out for a few minutes every day . . . and this seems to be working an awful lot better for me. So my questions:
- Is there actually any value in mixing in vocal specific exercises to my practice? Because it honestly never felt like it was helping the last couple times I tried.
- If so, what are the most useful/effective vocal exercises for general rock/pop/folk type singing?
Thanks!
I'm late to the party but there is some great advice in here!
TL;DR - to warm up for your purposes, you could try singing a melody an octave lower. Go slowly and focus on each note. Add some vibrato as you sit on each note, or if you struggle with vibrato, try with more and less breath behind each note. Focus on shaping every word, especially the vowels; sing a line with a forward, almost nasally tone, and then sing it again but with a "lower" less forward sound. Now try all of this in the proper range you need to sing the song at.
If you can master that kind of variation in practice, you'll understand better how to reproduce it consistently.
IMO vocal exercises (and proper warm-up) are essential to consistent, good performance. I was a choirboy for many years and developed a strong sense of pitch partly through singing at church growing up. It wasn't until high school choir that we were drilled on proper technique including breathing, tone, and timbre, where all four parts needed to be singing the same shape of a vowel with the same energy for the conductor's desired effect.
When I "turned rock" and started playing in gigging bands, I had the fundamentals of singing down to a science. I just needed to find those "notches" in my throat for rock grit and flavour that didn't blow out my voice. And when I finally found them, I realized I have to be warmed up before I can pinpoint the sound I want to produce and make it happen *consistently*
All of this to say, just like guitar technique, practice is the only way to get better and develop as a singer. If your version of practice is just singing the songs you want to sing with less intensity at first and then more intensity, and you're getting a good sound (to you and to others), there's nothing wrong with foregoing the choral-style warm-ups. But some deep breaths, and exhaling over 5, 10, 20 seconds, or sustaining a note for 5, 10, 20 seconds goes a long way.
Just don't go from cold to 100% rock or you will feel it
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