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All Sings Page 2
Of The Breath And Whirling Currents
(SINGING FORWARD) The veriest beginner knows that in order to use the breath to the fullest advantage, it must remain very long diffused back in the mouth. A mistaken idea of singing forward misleads most to press it forward and thus allow it t...
On Vocal Registers
What is a vocal register? A series of tones sung in a certain way, which are produced by a certain position of the vocal organs--larynx, tongue, and palate. Every voice includes three registers--chest, middle, and head. But all are not employed...
Practical Exercises
The practical study of singing is best begun with single sustained tones, and with preparation on the sound of ah alone, mingled with o and oo. A position as if one were about to yawn helps the tongue to lie in the right place. In order not to ...
Preliminary Practice
It is very important for all who wish to become artists to begin their work not with practical exercises in singing, but with serious practice in tone production, in breathing in and out, in the functions of the lungs and palate, in clear pronunci...
Preparation For Singing
No one can sing properly without first preparing for it, mentally and physically, with all the organs concerned in the production of the voice. We have in this to perform three functions, simultaneously:-- First, to draw breath quietly, not t...
Resonant Consonants
K, l, m, n, p, s, and r at the end of a word or syllable must be made resonant by joining to the end of the word or syllable a rather audible [)e] (eh); for instance, Wandel^e, Gretel^e, etc. A thing that no one teaches any longer, or knows or ...
Sensation And Position Of The Tongue
We feel the placing of its tip against or beneath the front teeth; and place the tip very low, so that it really curves over in front. (See plate.) Its hinder part must be drawn back toward the palate, in the pronunciation of every letter. F...
Singing Covered
We sing covered as soon as the soft palate is lowered toward the nose (that is, in the middle register), and the resonance and attack are transferred thither so that the breath can flow over the soft palate through the nose. This special functi...
Singing Toward The Nose Head Voice
When the peak of the softest part of the palate is placed forward toward the nose, instead of being drawn up high behind the nose, as in the head voice (see plate, head voice and nasal tone), it forms a kind of nasal production which, as I have al...
The Attack
To attack a tone, the breath must be directed to a focal point on the palate, which lies under the critical point for each different tone; this must be done with a certain decisiveness. There must, however, be no pressure on this place; for the ov...
The Cure
There are no magic cures for the singer. Only slowly, vibration upon vibration, can the true pitch be won back. In the word soaring lies the whole idea of the work. No more may the breath be allowed to flow uncontrolled through the wearied vocal c...
The Great Scale
This is the most necessary exercise for all kinds of voices. It was taught to my mother; she taught it to all her pupils and to us. But I am probably the only one of them all who practises it faithfully! I do not trust the others. As a pupil one m...
The Head Voice
The head tone signifies, for all voices, from the deepest bass to the highest soprano,--excepting for the fact that it furnishes the overtones for each single tone of the whole vocal gamut,--youth. A voice without vibrancy is an old voice. The mag...
The Highest Head Tones
As we have already seen, there is almost no limit to the height that can be reached by the pure head tone without admixture of palatal resonance. Very young voices, especially, can reach such heights, for without any strain they possess the necess...
The Lips
Of special importance for the tone and the word are the movements of the lips, which are so widely different in the bright and in the dark vowels. These movements cannot be too much exaggerated in practising. The same strength and elasticity to wh...
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Most Viewed
The Great Scale
Nasal Nasal Singing
Resonant Consonants
The Head Voice
The Vowel-sound _ah_
The Cure
Practical Exercises
Singing Covered
Least Viewed
Preparation For Singing
The Sensations Of The Palate
The Highest Head Tones
The Position Of The Mouth (contraction Of The Muscles Of Speech)
Development And Equalization
Extension Of The Compass And Equalization Of Registers
Concerning Expression
The Sensation Of The Resonance Of The Head Cavities