Can I learn to sing if I am tone deaf?

Q: Can I learn to sing if I am tone deaf?

A. Yes, you train and then you very soon realize that you are not tone-deaf at all – just untrained.  Very few people are really tone-deaf, although the expression is often used. The fun question to ask someone who says he is tone deaf is:  How do you know? You will find that the person is very well aware that he/she doesn't sound great? In fact, he probably hears very well. There is probably nothing wrong with your hearing. To be able to sing on key you have to be able to create vibration (sound) without restrictions.  The beauty is that you can develop this much faster than most people think. However, if you practice via singing scales I can guarantee that it will take much longer than necessary.  Also see the article on “How To Sing On Key

How To Connect Chest Voice To Head Voice

Q. How am I supposed to connect my chest voice to my head voice? I try and all I get is falsetto.

A. Well, when you say “try”, we don’t know you are doing or what the muscles are doing. The reason you can’t do it because the muscles that make it happen aren’t developed.  The bummer is that most people spend years and years singing scales, frustrated over this so-called “break”, but never discover the awareness of the muscles that make it happen - thus never develop theses muscles.  Sorry for the pitch, but in the Sing With Freedom program you develop greater awareness in the first 40 minutes, which we build on the create significant results in a couple of weeks.

What does “passagio” mean?

Q What does the term "passagio" mean?

A “Passagio” is one of those classic terms that I find unnecessary to use in my teaching (unless as fun trivia). It’s a term from the operatic school and refers to the “passage” – the bridge – between different registers, especially between chest voice and head voice. (The human voice actually has several areas of “register changes”.) What many seem to have forgotten is that the classic operatic “passagio” training strategies are about maintaining an operatic quality of sound while you pass through the “passagio”. Those strategies may not at all be helpful for contemporary singers.

Can singing lessons mess up my style?

Q I’m a pop/rock singer, but I’m wary about taking voice lessons if it’s going to change my sound and style.

A This is perhaps the most common concern of contemporary singers and an understandable one. It’s also a concern that will hold you back from tapping your true potential. The reason you want a coach on your team is to help you do what you want to do, but do it better. You want to be able to do it night after night. You want to be able to do it on a bad day. You want to feel free to express the way YOU want to express. If the coach helps you do that in a session or two you will feel it. If the coach is into promoting the “right” and “correct” way to sing, you are correctly concerned that he/she is teaching from the book and wanting to change your sound, rather than bringing out the best in you.

How To Sing High Notes: Open Your Mouth?

Q: I’ve been told to open my mouth more in order to sing high notes. Should I do this?

A: “Open your mouth” is a common instruction. “Darken the vowel”, “push from your stomach” , etc are other common "tricks". All these “tricks” do work in the same limiting way as if you were to do a biceps curl using your back and shoulders. You can actually lift more when doing so. But how much does it develop your biceps? When we discover how to sing high notes without this kind of external help, we also become freer as artists. Now we can express truthfully and freely.