How To Have An AMAZING
Vocal Performance With One Easy Technique!
Last night, I had a FANTASTIC vocal night.
I was hosting karaoke at my regular Saturday night gig and I re-discovered a
technique that I had stopped using for some time, called "articulating." Let
me tell you, I had more fun using it then I've ever had before, because I
was singing much better, and getting complimented and gushed over ALL NIGHT.
Songs that I would normally consider difficult became EASY, and any stage
fright I would usually begin the songs with melted away. I felt completely
prepared and confident, and it was SO much fun. So I wanted to write about
it so everyone else who's ever had trouble with singing could benefit from
it as well.
I learned this technique from a teacher I
had in junior high school, back when dinosaurs roamed the streets... maybe
it wasn't that long ago. The technique however, has been around forever.
Vocally articulating means to over-emphasize the words you're singing
when compared to speaking. Take how you would usually speak and exaggerate
it times two. Open your mouth wider, longer, and keep it open wide while
you're singing your vowels. Enunciate your consonants more.
That's the first half. The second
half is to keep your face completely lifted while you sing. Your eyebrows
should be raised and your eyes open wide like you've just found out you've
won a small lottery. That, in combination with exaggerating and
over-enunciating your words is the technique of articulating.
The easiest way to get into it is to first
raise your face, eyebrows, eyes, cheekbones... (think, you've just won a new
car!) and hold your face like that. Not in a greatly unnatural way, you
don't want to cause yourself vocal tension as a result of holding your face
too tightly. Then, sing your vowels with a wide open mouth, and enunciate
twice as much as you usually would while speaking. This will allow the sound
to flow far easier from your mouth, and it's especially great for high
notes, because by opening your mouth wider you'll find that you won't be
stretching to hit them. They'll come out naturally without you having to
force at all.
One important thing to also remember when
articulating is to pay attention to what your tongue is doing. Many people
forget that tongue position is very important! The proper spot for it is
resting at the bottom of your mouth, with the tip touching the back of your
teeth. NOT floating in the middle of your mouth! To clarify, I mean to rest
it only when holding a note. Obviously you need your tongue to enunciate
consonants and please, use it! But when you're holding a note for any length
of time make sure it's at the bottom of your mouth otherwise your sound will
come out a little muffled and cloudy.
Here are a couple of tips to help you
get used to articulating.
- The first is to practice in front of
the mirror. Look at yourself and practice lifting your face up first to
get used to the feeling, and alter it as necessary until you feel
comfortable. Then turn away from the mirror and memorize the feeling.
Practice relaxing your face and lifting it until you can remember what
it feels like to be properly lifted. (Again, lifted properly means to
have your eyebrows and cheekbones raised and your eyes wide open like
something has really surprised you.) Once you have that down, sing a
song in front of the mirror and over-emphasize your vowels and
consonants. Not to the point where it's really forced, just more then
you usually would while speaking. It's similar to modeling, if you've
ever watched a fashion show you'll notice when the models walk down the
runway they're always exaggerating the way they walk, taking longer,
over-emphasized steps. Same idea. Practice the two together, over and
over, until it doesn't feel foreign to you anymore.
- The second is actually an exercise to
practice called the "Alphabet exercise". Write down all the consonants
in the alphabet in the order they come in. What you do is this: Take the
first consonant which is B, and quickly say, baboo baboo baboo,
exaggerating the new "word". Then, move to the next consonant, which is
C. Say, cacoo cacoo cacoo, using the hard consonant sound. Go through
the entire alphabet of consonants doing this, one after another without
taking breaks. This gets your face used to moving quickly and more
openly. It's a great warm up and it makes your face more flexible, so
articulating becomes easier.
Give it a try! I'm 100% positive you'll
sing better and surprise yourself with the results.