nelliendm:dontbearuiner:deducecanoe:dontbearuiner:deducecanoe:beautytruthandstrangeness:deducecanoe:
nelliendm:dontbearuiner:deducecanoe:dontbearuiner:deducecanoe:beautytruthandstrangeness:deducecanoe:i-remember-there-was-mist:Guys. Stop what you’re doing and look at these unbelievable charts made by asthebelltolls, who allowed me to share them with all of you. Send love their way, because this is gorgeous and fabulous! Thank you SO MUCH!(And if you’re not sure about where your voice sits, check out this post for some help!) I knew I had a hell of a range but seeing it on a chart makes me feel more… Um… Like I should have gone into music as more than just for funzies. I’m dying to know what my actual range is. Amanda once made me sing through it but I don’t remember if she told me the notes. I also want to know the notes where my two breaks happen.Why do I have two, anyway? I thought people usually only had one. I think there is one in the lower range if you have one. My lower range is pretty low. One of my voice teachers used to have fun on occasion with me singing the phantom and Christine (lol) and there seemed to be a break Right at the beginning of the treble staff. It wasn’t a real one maybe I think it was the artificial byproduct of singing so low. This post is awesome.I forget exactly where my break is, but it is inconvenient as fuck. I trip over it CONSTANTLY.Usually around C or D. Prior or the break it is very easy to let the sound vibrate just in your mouth. You want to make sure it is vibrating in your sinus cavity too. At the break, make sure (and that is a weird visualization trick) that instead of the sound ‘passing over your lower teeth,’ that it is flowing out your nose and past your upper teeth. It takes some practice to get it pretty seamless but it can be done. ARE YOU A WIZARD?That’s pretty much where it is. I’ll try and keep your description in mind, that sounds awesomely useful. Thank you! ^_^This is a cool way to visualize range. But it reminded me of something, unrelated, that I learned in choir recently. Most people have a habit of referring so SA as the women’s parts and TBB as the men’s parts. Don’t. There are women who sing TBB and men who sing SA. Solution: treble and bass. -- source link
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