The "Appoggio" is called the Bernoulli's principle where equal amount of air inhaled into the mouth is simultaneously force up from the diaphragm...hence creating a confluence of air in the mouth which results in a swirling sound where singer "sings on the breath."
Hello James! Thank you for your note. So the Bernoulli principle is sayng that when the singer breathes in in very large quantity and energy, the result will be same quantity and energy of air coming out? And respectively, if singer breathes calmly, yet deeply the result will be the same when fonating? Like the first example will be more col fiato and the latter more towards sul fiato? I need to educate myself, thank you for this ;)
Amazing!! Thank you so much. My vocal coach constantly told me “more forward more forward” to the point where I was actually too forward and tense. The humming while inhaling immediately clicked for me so thank you so much!!
Honestly I’m not even a singer and got here thru a rabbit hole but I’m glad to say I watched the entire thing! Can you use this technique for lower notes too? Not only is it possible but can you use it to do the opposite effect like Celine dion of hitting really low notes instead of high ones?
are you saying you are breathing in WHILE you're singing those notes? like... if you keep singing, eventually your lungs will be full instead of empty? you are physically creating a vaccuum and drawing air INTO your lungs at the SAME time you're singing out a note?? I am very confused. Or do you mean your throat, mouth, soft palate are all keeping the inhale posture while you're letting air escape your lungs slowly? It does not make sense to me that you could inhale WHILE singing a note.
It just means that when you sing, to maintain the same feeling of natural recoil inhale in the ribs/lungs and suspend that feeling while you sing, versus pushing the breath. Push all the air out, and watch how your body recoils the air in without your help, with an open throat. You basically want to sing on this feeling and NOT let it collapse. No need to inhale extra air unless you’re singing a long passage, and even then, you always have the air you need. It’s just a matter of learning how to suspend and maintain the feeling of the natural recoil of breath as you sing, versus letting it collapse/push air. In less words, with a relaxed stomach, inhale, and before you get a chance to finish inhaling, interrupt the inhale with sound. This will help you start feeling what you need to feel. The ferinelli exercise also explains these controls.
The "Appoggio" is called the Bernoulli's principle where equal amount of air inhaled into the mouth is simultaneously force up from the diaphragm...hence creating a confluence of air in the mouth which results in a swirling sound where singer "sings on the breath."
Hello James! Thank you for your note. So the Bernoulli principle is sayng that when the singer breathes in in very large quantity and energy, the result will be same quantity and energy of air coming out? And respectively, if singer breathes calmly, yet deeply the result will be the same when fonating? Like the first example will be more col fiato and the latter more towards sul fiato? I need to educate myself, thank you for this ;)
Amazing!! Thank you so much. My vocal coach constantly told me “more forward more forward” to the point where I was actually too forward and tense. The humming while inhaling immediately clicked for me so thank you so much!!
Lovely smile❤
thank you! you have a great voice!
Thank you;)
Honestly I’m not even a singer and got here thru a rabbit hole but I’m glad to say I watched the entire thing! Can you use this technique for lower notes too? Not only is it possible but can you use it to do the opposite effect like Celine dion of hitting really low notes instead of high ones?
Cô giáo giỏi tiếng anh quá...👏👏👏
Đức N.C Cám ơn anh!:3
Hay lắm
Nice video em👏
are you saying you are breathing in WHILE you're singing those notes? like... if you keep singing, eventually your lungs will be full instead of empty? you are physically creating a vaccuum and drawing air INTO your lungs at the SAME time you're singing out a note?? I am very confused. Or do you mean your throat, mouth, soft palate are all keeping the inhale posture while you're letting air escape your lungs slowly? It does not make sense to me that you could inhale WHILE singing a note.
It just means that when you sing, to maintain the same feeling of natural recoil inhale in the ribs/lungs and suspend that feeling while you sing, versus pushing the breath.
Push all the air out, and watch how your body recoils the air in without your help, with an open throat.
You basically want to sing on this feeling and NOT let it collapse. No need to inhale extra air unless you’re singing a long passage, and even then, you always have the air you need. It’s just a matter of learning how to suspend and maintain the feeling of the natural recoil of breath as you sing, versus letting it collapse/push air.
In less words, with a relaxed stomach, inhale, and before you get a chance to finish inhaling, interrupt the inhale with sound. This will help you start feeling what you need to feel.
The ferinelli exercise also explains these controls.
Inalare. Not inhalare. Without "h"
lol