One Exercise to Dissolve Your Head/Chest Divide

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  • Опубликовано: 9 июн 2023
  • Get command and coordination over your register shifts with this exercise framework: dan-callaway-studio.ck.page/6...
    Find out how to work with me:
    dancallaway.com/work-with-me/
    If you’re new to my channel, my name's Dan Callaway. I teach music theatre voice and vocal pedagogy at Boston Conservatory at Berklee. I’ve performed on Equity stages for over 25 years, helped music theatre performers work sustainably on Broadway, national tours, and at top regional houses. I’ve taught at top music theatre programs for over 10 years (Elon University, and BoCo). I help music theatre singers build skill, gain confidence, and get to work.
    You can find out more about me here - dancallaway.com/about/
    If you’re a singer who likes to tell stories, and you want to do that in a satisfying, wholehearted way, you’ve landed in the right place.
    I make videos knowing that if I help one person learn a game changing skill, carry away a helpful tool, or hear something that makes their life better, then it’s worth it. I hope this helped you today.
    "Head Voice" and "Chest Voice" are just two of the many terms that continue to confuse singers. In this video, I teach you one exercise that helps. You'll understand how your voice is a continuum of possibilities, not cubbyholes or categories of abrupt change (unless you want that for stylistic purposes.)
    This is a contemporary theater singer take on the classic messa di voce -- it helps you discover how your voice transitions from mode 2 (head/thin) to mode 1 (chest/thick) and then back to mode 2.
    If you've never done an exercise, like this, you will probably encounter some speed bumps along the way. Stay with it, and just notice where the abrupt changes happen. Over time, your laryngeal muscles, your brain, and neurons will all start to coordinate to hand over phonatory responsibility.
    If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to me -- over at dancallaway.com
    #messadivoce #yourvoiceisacontinuum #musicaltheatresinger #musicaltheatre #smoothvocaltransitions #musicaltheatrevoiceteacher
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Комментарии • 25

  • @angalmeida29
    @angalmeida29 11 дней назад +3

    Fabulous exercise Dan ❤thank you

  • @RafhaelCedeno
    @RafhaelCedeno 11 дней назад +1

    I needed this video so badly a year or two ago. Mixing has been such a journey but just showing up and doing it , like you said, is so much the key. And not having a hate relationship with the larynx - which I’m still working on ! But adding this to days when the balance is off, which happens a lot in the mornings.

    • @dancallawaystudio
      @dancallawaystudio  11 дней назад

      Yep, the morning has varying levels of cobwebs for all of us -- just a matter of learning how your own instrument coordinates best. Yep, I think if you can hold on to the truth that if you keep doing things you know to be helpful, your voice will organize, balance, and collaborate more and more. I've found being a curious observer of the voice has been such a helpful point of view -- helps you navigate the frustration while things are getting situated.

  • @robynrox
    @robynrox 10 дней назад +3

    Is there any chance you can get rid of that blue highlight to your subtitles? The subtitles themselves are OK but the moving blue blob makes it difficult to concentrate on what you're saying.

    • @dancallawaystudio
      @dancallawaystudio  10 дней назад +1

      appreciate this feedback. Yep, that's an easy fix. You're the second person who's mentioned that 👍

  • @musikkamagga3770
    @musikkamagga3770 5 дней назад +1

    Super, super cool to see someone showing Messa di Voce exercises, especially around G4. Few voice teachers have the courage to do so!
    In my experience, the only way to achieve this is through pharyngeal resonance. The "pharyngeal voice", similar to a cat sound around that vowel/pitch, is what finally unlocked me to stay in the middle between registers M1 and M2 and this means completely transforming the singing.
    It definitely sounds like you are using pharyngeal resonance there. I've heard some people say this is the ONLY way to actually mix M1 and M2.
    Do you agree with that statement?

    • @dancallawaystudio
      @dancallawaystudio  5 дней назад

      Thanks so much for the kind comment. Your perception is accurate because when I do conceive of resonance, I think about the pharynx because it's the most immediate vibration/amplification location after the folds do their thing -- everything vibrates out from the pharynx. So when I do this exercise, my attention does center there and tunes into the sensations I'm feeling there (above the larynx and in the snorty spot). I don't know if we even need to demarcate it as pharyngeal resonance because that's just the reality -- that's where the voice primarily resonates whether you're thinking about your mask or the back of your skull or your chest. Of course, there's oral cavity, nose, and sinuses and bones (that no one can hear) resonating, but all that to say that you perceived the way that I pay attention to the voice -- I feel like if you lovingly witness the pharyngeal resonance with good breath management, vocal fold balance, and tract shaping that supports the aesthetic you're going for, the rest is taken care of by physics

    • @musikkamagga3770
      @musikkamagga3770 День назад

      @@dancallawaystudio Thank you so much for the answer!
      At first, I was really confused about what you said, because, although I know the pharynx starts right above the larynx, or in other words in the back of the mouth, my experience with "pharyngeal voice" was way above in the pharynx. Like when you do a very bright baby cry or cat meow, and it seems to reverberate in the top of the nose right between your eyes.
      I'm experimenting with lower notes in low volume though, and it seems that messa di voice on that region benefits from a contraction of lower portions of the pharynx (like closer to the soft palate at E4).
      Probably I'm just starting to understand this.
      What is your experience with the pharyngeal sound in terms of where it ressonates? Does what I said about the forehead ressonate with you somehow? Like in this video below, the examples seem to come from much higher in the pharyngeal tract:
      ruclips.net/video/JpoLBZvvPkE/видео.html
      Also I get confused when people talk about "cry mechanism", I don't know what that means physically, but it seems to be a different thing.

    • @dancallawaystudio
      @dancallawaystudio  День назад

      ​@@musikkamagga3770It's very common for folks to feel strong resonance where you describe -- nose, cheek bones, front sinuses, etc. I've just noticed that everyone feels things differently -- one singer might use their mask resonance sensation as a helpful guide while another might have limited perception there. That's why I think it important to know what's going on as far as we can observe and understand and then let each singer notice where and how they sense their own vocal compass points.

    • @dancallawaystudio
      @dancallawaystudio  День назад

      ​​@@musikkamagga3770in my experience "cry" is a cue to help coordinate a certain breath movement, fold vibration, and tract shape -- it can help you fine a mode 1 rather pressurized sound and also gives you some emotional impulse to support the sound. But it's more of a cue rather than a specific configuration in my experience -- much like a hooting owl, whimpering puppy, or super whiny child might be other images that help us connect familiar sounds to the ways they're made. I'll have to check out the linked video to see what you're asking about -- thanks for the questions

  • @michaelwhy79
    @michaelwhy79 11 дней назад +1

    Hi. How can I get in touch, I'm having some trouble signing up on the site?

    • @dancallawaystudio
      @dancallawaystudio  11 дней назад

      oh, hey -- thanks for letting me know. I'll check that out. You can always email dan@dancallaway.com dancallaway.com/teaching/contact-for-lessons/

  • @dorefromDetroit
    @dorefromDetroit 11 дней назад +2

    Just to clarify, the thought is to let the Crack happen, don't try to correct or smooth, and over time the voice will smooth out the transition itself? Is that the action? Thank you anyone who can clarify

    • @michaelwhy79
      @michaelwhy79 11 дней назад

      I personally think it's easier to build and strengthen the voice from a position where it feels most comfortable. That way, you start off by using the correct muscles and with the least effort. Otherwise, if you put everything into just trying to be big and loud from the get-go, the strain, tension and effort involved will eventually wear you out. Trust me. Start easy, soft, and build it. With discipline and smart practicing, it will happen quite quickly.

    • @srfrover
      @srfrover 11 дней назад

      unfortunately it’s not like that… you need specific air “work” and feel in order to get mixed voice.
      of course you shouldn’t strive to make it work and you should understand how much voice and volume you need to mix first.
      vocal cry is been key for me.
      if you don’t intentionally do certain things you won’t get mixed voice… but also you need to know how to turn off the things that go against you.

    • @dancallawaystudio
      @dancallawaystudio  11 дней назад +1

      Hey there thanks for the question. In this particular exercise, folks may or may not experience an abrupt register shift. The whole crack-stravaganza part of this :) was to say that if you do experience a big hiccup going from mode 2 to mode 1, that's all right. In fact, that's usually a sign you're working in a balanced and sustainable way. I've worked with some singers who didn't let themselves crack through compensation in other muscle groups, and that makes things hard in the long run. The whole notice-where-the-change happens is to cultivate 1. observation and awareness of your own instrument, feeling the transition point in your own body, 2. giving yourself permission to let the voice do that so that you can actually see where that happens for you-- there are laryngeal freedom exercises i do that specifically utilize the crack/yodel, and 3. to ensure that you're working with folds that are vibrating with balance and ease -- if you're slamming them together or recruiting external tensions to make the transition, you could be setting yourself up for working way hard at singing, and that lets less of real you through. Hope this helps.

    • @dancallawaystudio
      @dancallawaystudio  11 дней назад

      @@srfrover you're right, there are many nuanced factors here -- dynamic support relating to phonation, vowel shape, amount of twang musical style. Singing's always 47 things interacting, that's for sure.

    • @dancallawaystudio
      @dancallawaystudio  11 дней назад

      @@michaelwhy79 I think this is a wise plan -- start from ease, return to ease as much as possible.

  • @johndove343
    @johndove343 12 дней назад +1

    Good videos, but the text bubble is distracting

  • @kenra2964
    @kenra2964 11 дней назад +1

    😂

    • @kenra2964
      @kenra2964 11 дней назад +1

      ..as in, laughing with you and being grateful for you showcasing that letting things happen in order to get to know your voice is very comforting.

    • @dancallawaystudio
      @dancallawaystudio  10 дней назад

      I'm so glad you got a laugh with me -- fun times :)