
- #LISTENING SINGING TEACHER HOW TO#
- #LISTENING SINGING TEACHER PROFESSIONAL#
- #LISTENING SINGING TEACHER FREE#
That should help stabilize the tone and build support. Then they count the seconds for you! Very handy, engaging and fun to do. This is a support issue and not all teachers agree on that. I don’t entirely agree with the technical wording there - but that’s ok.
#LISTENING SINGING TEACHER HOW TO#
They show with a man figure how to do it. There is an animated demonstration of some exercises - that’s super awesome: First exercise is a long S, exhale exercise. There are 2 levels to start with: beginner 1 and 2. You can read the warm up section for more a more detailed opinion. That’s critical because starting too low, going all the way up and back all the way down might hurt your voice. Then others go throughout the whole range (or most of it), no gradual expansion, or starting from a comfortable note. Some exercises don't go throughout the range, or almost not at all, because they serve another purpose, that's perfectly fine. Because they make you sing all, or most, of your range, from bottom to top then back down. Looking back I understand I really should've gone for my comfortable notes (they said not to strain, but they meant really sing ONLY in your comfort zone). It wasn't very self explanatory - However - this is the first app I found which helps you find your range! Turned out not to be the only one - but Kudos. They already have a staff there on the screen - why not?įirst screen: My vocal range: shows keyboard and the different voice types, you can also record to detect your range. I think it would be really cool if they wrote down the exercises in music notes. And that’s the standard that is taken here into account. That makes it fun and fancy, but all of those people can already sing.
#LISTENING SINGING TEACHER PROFESSIONAL#
I think one of the caveats here is that the creators of this app are all professional singers. On the other hand, if they took the trouble to ask me what my range is and create routines so I can use them, why won’t they make them so that I can use them? You can create your own warm up, that’s good! I can copy the routines they created if I like those, and make sure they are in my range. I should learn from that and use more funny exercises!Ī good thing: piano accompaniment is a joy, this is for sure a professional pianist and the chords are not simple, they sound like a song accompaniment, which makes it inspiring and motivating. That creates a positive experience which one will opt to repeat. The exercises become more and more creative and funny, definitely a plus. But they don’t warm you up lower than the middle. The scales go up and back down, which is good. In getting warmer the exercises are already quite advanced.
#LISTENING SINGING TEACHER FREE#
If you would like to use this app to warm up, but agree with me that the first routines are too hard, here is the order I would recommend:Īfter that - feel free to play around with any of the routines Passaggio exercise does not explain how it helps the passaggio, and is actually yet another version of the same one we repeated many times. Some use extra tension around the airway, some will hyperventilate. They could be really good further down the line.Īt some point Arnold says: remember to breathe. Some of the exercises actually feel good, like those starting with NG or G sounds. That should be in the very first time he asks to do lip trills. How to do the lip trills is explained here in a very helpful way, actually. Technical guidance: there's a mix of good and not so good here. There are apparently new exercises coming up. Two exercises in total you can warm up with. Then the third and forth are warm up exercises. They don’t warm you up across the range, but they are short and only repeat once.

The first 2 exercises are more like an accuracy test than a vocal warm up. It went up pretty high, so If you have a certain voice type which doesn’t go all the way up I suppose that will lower your score even further. I sang the most advanced exercise accurately and only got 42%. Also sometimes it decided that my voice jumped an octave down, which was definitely not the case. Singing in a straight tone helped the score, but one should know how to do that without straining. It was very discouraging seeing the “needle” showing my vibrato as if I sing out of tune. That is not motivating at all! When following the exercise rather well I still only got 87%. They will lower your grade for singing an inaccurate length of the note or if you have vibrato. The biggest bummer is: they will grade you from the first second, so it’s very hard to get a good score. You are expected to sing simultaneously, without a demonstration.

No staff with music written, so no way to know what the exercise is in advance. They show you on the scale (note name only) lines of different lengths, and play the exercise for you.
