How do you sing by your chest voice? what is the chest register?!


Question: Registration

Registration in singing refers to the "change" or "break" in vocal quality that occurs when the vocal cords readjust themselves for pitches of faster of slower frequencies (higher or lower pitches). Most singers who have not benefited from formal vocal training will experience a noticeable change in quality when they reach a certain point in tessitura (range) of the voice while singing a scale passage. This "lift" in the voice marks the point where the low (chest) voice ends and the high (head) voice begins. The sensation of the register change, which can fluctuate according to the intensity of the tone or the form of the vowel used in a vocal exercise or musical phrase, normally occurs somewhere in the area just above the pitch of the speaking voice.

So really what this is saying is... your chest voice is the lower pitches that you sing, your head voice is the higher pitches that you sing, and the article doesn't mention anything about your "throat voice" but those pitches are somewhere in between head and chest. You can practice moving from one register to the next by vocalizing or singing musical scales on a neutral vowel like "oo", "oh", or "ah." Or just sigh like a school girl that's in love.. start high and go low. That's how I have my choir kids practice and warm up their singing voices. You can feel the sound move from your head to your chest.


Answers: Registration

Registration in singing refers to the "change" or "break" in vocal quality that occurs when the vocal cords readjust themselves for pitches of faster of slower frequencies (higher or lower pitches). Most singers who have not benefited from formal vocal training will experience a noticeable change in quality when they reach a certain point in tessitura (range) of the voice while singing a scale passage. This "lift" in the voice marks the point where the low (chest) voice ends and the high (head) voice begins. The sensation of the register change, which can fluctuate according to the intensity of the tone or the form of the vowel used in a vocal exercise or musical phrase, normally occurs somewhere in the area just above the pitch of the speaking voice.

So really what this is saying is... your chest voice is the lower pitches that you sing, your head voice is the higher pitches that you sing, and the article doesn't mention anything about your "throat voice" but those pitches are somewhere in between head and chest. You can practice moving from one register to the next by vocalizing or singing musical scales on a neutral vowel like "oo", "oh", or "ah." Or just sigh like a school girl that's in love.. start high and go low. That's how I have my choir kids practice and warm up their singing voices. You can feel the sound move from your head to your chest.

http://academic.scranton.edu/student/TRA...

there you go



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