Adveser wrote:
noodles wrote:
I asked my friend for tips a month or so ago and she said it boils down to if it hurts don't do it, and if it sounds good do it more.
Slowly coming to terms with the fact that my voice is low and more of Johnny Cash than a Cedric Bixler or Thom Yorke and it is making me sad. But I agree that struggling with it doesn't help a whole lot. There was one day where I thought "wow I'm doing the high stuff and it sounds great!" but I haven't gotten back into that situation yet.
I recorded myself singing for the first time in 6~ months today and discovered my voice is very boring. Might be because the recording was very low volume though.
vis falsetto: At first I though my head voice was my falsetto, now I'm not really sure what it is.
I know exactly what you mean. Just today I decided "fuck it, i'm going to sing exactly in the tone my regular voice has" and went with something by queensryche, since I heard Geoff's speaking voice for the first time last night. I have to sing a little lower than Geoff and I thought his voice was really heavy, you know. It turned out great. I was hitting notes so loud I turned the mic off and could still hear myself with the Sony Studio heaphones that are supposed to be isolated. I hadn't heard that in a very long time even though what I've been doing lately sounds good too. You really have to let go and just use your natural voice. It is hard to trust singing in a very low voice 100% of the time, then will get you super-high notes with ease and the lower stuff just happens. You can concentrate on the stuff that matters like the nuance and the emotion instead of wondering if you are on key or doing it right.
The only problem with the low voice is that you have to be able to hit high notes in a head voice because you are gonna need it because the "falsetto" doesn't sound like a modal voice until you get kinda high in pitch, but after that your voice will soar with ease and the notes will be more than likely a full octave above what you could have done.
You really have to be aware that the low sounding tone disappears when the notes get higher. Listen to Renato Tribuzy. He has a really deep voice but hits the insane notes too.
You really control pitch by opening and closing the vocal cords, You control the tone with managing the airflow, so if you are doing anything else to hit a note, it is probably disrupting your tonal resonance and it is going to sound BAD, like out of phase speakers.
UPDATE:
This is essentially trying to connect two things that don't fit. Disregard this. You can sing in any register you want, so long as the larynx stays in the same spot throughout, and yes, you are going to have to keep it there because it wants to move on it's own.
What was happening is that singing as deep as possible keeps the larynx in the same position, hence the results.
The answer is both a yes and a no. You can change the way your voice sounds by moving the larynx up and down, but even if the tone is higher pitched you still have to approach the singing exactly like you were trying to sing in a bass register, if you are one, or whatever your register is. The tone will change, but it needs to be the original sound to change without sounding really irritating. trying to sound "not bass heavy" is going to be a disaster. Just do it anyway and be amazed that it doesn't sound the way you expect.