Singing Chest Voice Too Loud & Head Voice Too Weak? (Here's how to fix it...)

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  • Опубліковано 9 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 17

  • @JayJaeOfficial
    @JayJaeOfficial  2 роки тому +1

    ►► Grab my "3 Proven Ways To Sing High Notes Well" and use it to unlock your high notes today →
    bit.ly/3oKblYf

    • @L2_Impart
      @L2_Impart 2 роки тому

      Ty so muchas J.J. your videos helps me a lot

  • @into.the.wood.chipper.
    @into.the.wood.chipper. 2 роки тому +3

    Sounds like you are describing the "flageolet"/"bell"/"flute" register. If so, that's not falsetto- it's a very thinned out version of chest voice.

  • @nellyd9280
    @nellyd9280 2 роки тому +1

    Good explanation!

  • @lassestube
    @lassestube Рік тому +1

    He’s like Bruce lee of vocal coaching :)

  • @luisaviles8662
    @luisaviles8662 2 роки тому +2

    jayjae can u do video on how to strengthen the head voice. my head voice is usually breathy and choppy and i have a hard time on trying to find vocal chord closure

    • @into.the.wood.chipper.
      @into.the.wood.chipper. 2 роки тому

      Lift your larynx as high as you can and make fish lips. Pretend that you have the tip of a sharp pencil in them. Then, sing the word "who". Start as high as comfortable, and slowly slide down. "Whooooooo". Kind of like a whoop or cheer, but quieter. You do not want to push the volume of this- only go as loud as you need to to make the sound. These tiny oo sounds do not grow, they simply get clearer- and as a result, your full voice gets thicker and bigger and brighter and louder. It takes a very long time for this to develop, though, so be patient. These are tiny, delicate muscles that are being gently stretched and flexed, so trying to fast track this process will only work against you. It has to happen slowly, over a period of months and years. This is a 300-year-old voice building opera technique and is only being resurrected by a small handful of people. Hopefully, it will become more common, because you will find it is rather revolutionary and it will forever change the way you look at singing and how your voice works. There are some voice teachers and students who don't think this works, but that is because they are either practicing it too loud, or too quiet. They probably also have their larynx too low. It HAS TO BE HIGH.

    • @luisaviles8662
      @luisaviles8662 2 роки тому

      @@into.the.wood.chipper. thanks i’ll try practicing this later since i have classes

  • @antoineaquino3055
    @antoineaquino3055 2 роки тому +1

    can you make a video about difference in falsetto and head voice because im really good with head voice but very weak in falsetto

    • @devilboymanish9165
      @devilboymanish9165 2 роки тому

      Last month I find my head voice now I forget how to sing in falsetto now it's so strong head voice I wanna sing attention by Charlie but I can't bro 🥺

  • @WillBuildsStuff
    @WillBuildsStuff 2 роки тому +1

    how do you fix broken head voice? some notes don't come out, just airy sound, I feel like mine is strong enough, but it just has gaps in head voice

    • @devilboymanish9165
      @devilboymanish9165 2 роки тому

      Same here I think we change placement that's why it happened

    • @into.the.wood.chipper.
      @into.the.wood.chipper. 2 роки тому

      The same way you fix broken chest voice. Work at it gently. Never push volume, but let it happen. Think of your voice going in your mouth and through the back of your head as you move up in pitch. That is the sensation of mixed voice with predominant high placement (head resonance), and that is how you keep from straining your voice. For the notes that you can't do with a lowered larynx yet, practice with a high larynx on only "whoooo". Do not get louder as you go higher or lower in pitch. When you go up, keep it the same volume. When you go down, lower the volume. Eventually, you will have enough strength to be able to keep your larynx slightly lower on the same pitch where you used to have to raise it. Even so, you want to continue training that high larynx position on "who". That is what develops the ability to lower your larynx without losing compression, in the first place. At some point, you may let go of your support in your stomach and feel and hear a clunking sound in your throat. That is the sound of a release of compression. So, even though it doesn't seem like it, this "who" flageolet sound is VERY compressed. You might even feel it as a slight pinching above your tongue and behind it. That is the arytenoids which are attached to your vocal cords, closing them tightly together along the thin edges. As long as you stay on "whoooo", the compression will be just right. If you do it on "haaaaa", that's too much compression- and you will feel like you're going to choke.

    • @devilboymanish9165
      @devilboymanish9165 2 роки тому

      @@into.the.wood.chipper. thnxxxx man for this ❤️ ur ryt but I have to do hard out for strong lungs then I can sustain all the high notes and low notes again tysm for information

  • @NehaKumariBAdmno
    @NehaKumariBAdmno 2 роки тому

    Pls tell how to sing in tune

    • @into.the.wood.chipper.
      @into.the.wood.chipper. 2 роки тому +1

      To sing in tune, listen to a singer and try to mimic what they are doing. This is like training wheels on a bicycle- sooner or later, you will be able to sing in tune without listening to someone else sing. I originally learned by playing songs in my headphones and singing along. The best songs to practice with were the ones that went above where my voice could go, giving me the challenge of trying to get closer to those pitches every day. Even now, some 25 years later, I still learn new songs by listening to them over and over, getting the original singer's voice in my head, and then trying to make my voice sound similar until they blend together in my ears. As someone who has won several singing contests, I can tell you that it works.

    • @NehaKumariBAdmno
      @NehaKumariBAdmno 2 роки тому

      @@into.the.wood.chipper. thank you