Dear Maestro, thank you very much for your invaluable exercises. Since I started exercising according to your excellent technique, I have progressed very quickly. I very, very happy having found you. I wish you all the best.
Thank you Jeff! That was some quite high register alto exercises! Almost in my head voice the whole time!! It's great for practicing the transition of the passagio without ''breaking''! Difficult but definitely doable! Thx
@@Christian_Girl120 Ahh haha still impressive! My highest note at the moment is a c#6 in headvoice, I'm 17 and also an alto. Hope to one day belt a F5 but I think I'm gonna work towards that goal very slowly
Lately I am hitting notes above the passagio sometimes like real parts of the range so that it properly rings and then sustaining it is easy. But it’s like I don’t entirely know how I do it, and when I excitedly try to repeat it ‘doing the same thing’ it’s gone, sticks in the throat. Then I change my position, perhaps lean back a little, and it’s back, but still hard to repeat. Sometimes it works to sneak up on it, not get a good breath and come down to it from a c6. I’ve never before been able to sing above Eb5 without strain. I could squeak even a few notes above C6, but not comfortably about Eb5. I’m getting now this E5 that’s kind of weird, sort mezzo style glass shattering. When it’s there I almost feel like I could go an octave higher if I wanted to. How do I figure out what I’m doing so that it’s more repeatable?
Try to focus on your physical experience. Noticing how that feels when it's right versus wrong will help inform you on how you're using your body to sing the notes that you're getting consistently. Focusing on recreating that physical experience will be crucial.
Getting gradually more reliable, but old habits die slow. I try to stop when I’m doing it wrong, but not always disciplined about it. Sort of accidentally got an E6 in the process of convincing myself E5 isn’t a high note, not so repeatable, never done that before as other than staccato.
Dear Maestro, thank you very much for your invaluable exercises. Since I started exercising according to your excellent technique, I have progressed very quickly. I very, very happy having found you. I wish you all the best.
I am so grateful to have found these exercises. To learn to sing, dreams come true.
Quarantine singers here❤️
There's definitely been an uptick on the channel lately!
Thanks for watching!
Jeff
I love this one! I mean, I love all of them, but I really love this one!
Thanks!
Thank you so much for that! I really appreciate it!
Jeff
Thanks for this! This is such a big help for enhancing my singing voice🙌
Magnificent content
Thanks for the workout!
You're the best ever, thank you so much. You didn't only help me singing, but also feeling better about myself.
Thank you for that. I am glad to be able to serve in such capacity!
Keep singing!
Jeff
Love this warm up. Thank you Jeff!
Thank you Jeff! That was some quite high register alto exercises! Almost in my head voice the whole time!! It's great for practicing the transition of the passagio without ''breaking''! Difficult but definitely doable! Thx
Nice! Yes, it would be indeed at a fairly high tessitura and sustained! Keep it up!
Jeff
Thank you!
I was classified as an alto. But I can reach a G above a high C. I was surprised I could hit it. I use a lot of breath control to do that.
In head voice or in mix/chest?
@@yentepan Head voice. I'm 55, so I am careful. I'm not 25 anymore!!! LOL!!
@@Christian_Girl120 Ahh haha still impressive! My highest note at the moment is a c#6 in headvoice, I'm 17 and also an alto. Hope to one day belt a F5 but I think I'm gonna work towards that goal very slowly
thank you again!
As always you are the best!!
That’s was awesomely helpful
Excellent! That's what I'm trying to do here!
Jeff
Lately I am hitting notes above the passagio sometimes like real parts of the range so that it properly rings and then sustaining it is easy. But it’s like I don’t entirely know how I do it, and when I excitedly try to repeat it ‘doing the same thing’ it’s gone, sticks in the throat. Then I change my position, perhaps lean back a little, and it’s back, but still hard to repeat. Sometimes it works to sneak up on it, not get a good breath and come down to it from a c6. I’ve never before been able to sing above Eb5 without strain. I could squeak even a few notes above C6, but not comfortably about Eb5. I’m getting now this E5 that’s kind of weird, sort mezzo style glass shattering. When it’s there I almost feel like I could go an octave higher if I wanted to. How do I figure out what I’m doing so that it’s more repeatable?
Try to focus on your physical experience. Noticing how that feels when it's right versus wrong will help inform you on how you're using your body to sing the notes that you're getting consistently. Focusing on recreating that physical experience will be crucial.
Getting gradually more reliable, but old habits die slow. I try to stop when I’m doing it wrong, but not always disciplined about it. Sort of accidentally got an E6 in the process of convincing myself E5 isn’t a high note, not so repeatable, never done that before as other than staccato.
thanks!
THANK YOU!!
Thank you!!! So helpful!!!