Whether you sing for profit or pleasure, Power to Sing will teach you how to sing amazing high notes with a voice that's powerful, without straining and yelling, so your voice will last a lifetime.
If your voice is weak it will become strong. If there’s been vocal abuse, that will disappear.
If you don’t have vibrato, you’ll learn it and it will sound easy and natural. Your singing will become confident and inspiring, just like you’ve dreamed.
Simple vocal exercises are clearly explained and demonstrated so you can do them. These exercises cause positive changes in your voice and your singing. You gain new muscle memory, so bad singing habits disappear.
You learn to do exciting things with your singing you never thought possible.
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Second 'ng' note and my voice wobbles/breaks. Awful. This exercise clearly shows I can't sing in mixed (no shit) but does nothing to help me achieve anything outside frustration. I have managed a siren up without a break before, but definitely can't with this sound. How does this 'help you get mixed voice'? All it does is pull my break as low as possible. The 'ming' sound I can sing in chest but not in mix.
Another thing to note about amy lee is she sings with her soft palette raised the entire time. It’s very difficult. She’s been trained singing since childhood and it shows.
I'm on a mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints in Ghana, Africa until Summer 2025. But before we left, was taking a break from uploading regular videos. There are still 100's of videos to get through and plenty of great things to learn. I always keep up with comments here as well. Thanks for asking! :)
@@PowerToSing thank you so much for your videos, they are of great help. You are a great teacher, simple to understand. Hope your videos continue to help many.
Can you replace the bubble lips exercise with blowing bubbles in a glass of water using a straw? My last vocal teacher had me do that bc I can't do the other one and trust me I've tried everything over the years. 🤷🏻♀️ Thanks!
Yes you can. But you still have to transition the same condition to your singing. That's where for me bubbles helps. It's a little closer to singing with words.
@@PowerToSingthank you so much for getting back to me. I was struggling before I learned about pulling chest. Never even heard of that before I discovered you! It's so helpful! Thanks again!
This is so useful and has helped my vibrato brilliantly, thanks! I find my challenge though is near the top of my register, there my vibrato pretty much disappears. Do you have any advice for that?
You can use it to help your exercises for sure. But simply clasping your hands in front of you and shaking them while sustaining a note will be even better.
@@TailyDoll_ Yes! I didn't get vibrato until age 43. Vibrato is something anyone can develop. These may help too: ru-vid.com/group/PLc6YT-50Ji8EzWKaWWpi5vNrQ2ZV3_0At&si=HUO-i8izCkSyKYle
Yes...you have the same problem I had. You are pulling the chest voice too high. Once you are able to get into the bridge, you will experience a blend of chest and head voice which is so much easier. As the pitch ascends, you continue using the same vocal coordination into head voice and it feels effortless. It can happen quickly in the exercises. Singing confidently that way took me a while.
The important thing is to do them as demonstrated. I'd do them a couple of times a day. Maybe 15 minutes each time. If done correctly, it doesn't take long to make significant progress. Good luck and have fun!
@@PowerToSing Thank you so much. So after doing the exercises for a while will the larynx learn to stay low/neutral even without the "dopey goo" sound?
@@jqvu87 Yes! you are retraining your nervous system to accept this new feeling. Eventually it will stay down without you having to impose the larynx with the exaggerated dumb sound.
@@jqvu87 Yes! You are retraining your nervous system to accept this new feeling. Eventually the larynx will stay down without you having to impose it down with the exaggerated dumb sound.
Hey, I’m Georg and 3 years ago I injured my voice while singing. For about 2 years I haven’t been able to talk without pain and swelling feeling at all so I’ve not talked at all. I’ve consulted with my doctors and they’ve told me to exercise speaking regularly even if there’s pain but I want to spread my story to get second opinions. I used to sing a lot for several years before my injury. Some days even about 3 hours a day. Went to singing school sometimes, learn a bit of the (CVT vocal technique) One evening, I started to sing and my voice was not that great that day and I also drank a milk product before what causes my throat to produce a lot of mucus and thick feeling. I tried to sing one high note, but I couldn't reach it, so I squeezed my neck and vocal chords to get that high note and that’s how I injured my voice. From that day on my vocal injury has gone worse to the point that for 2 years now, I haven’t been speaking at all. Just a couple of words in one year.
The reason for it is now when I speak, my vocal chords and thyroid area get “swollen” and painful(nerve pinching pain). I put swollen in brackets, because I’ve been to a laryngoscope and the camera didn’t detect any swelling in my vocal chords when they looked at it. And also they didn’t find anything other than couple of granulomas(not on the vocal chords) which could have been caused by some food intolerance. The vocal chords were just weak and atrophied.
Going back to 2021 when I firstly injured my voice. The symptoms then were similar, there was the swelling feeling, and nerve pain. (it’s really weird to me that there was no swelling detected on camera, because when I get the swelling feeling, my whole throat feels so swollen. I even got a thyroid ultrasound, but nothing was detected there) So back then, basically I still could use my voice after the injury. So I had to not speak for a couple of weeks and then the swelling feeling went away. And I could practice again and talk. But as time went on. The swelling came back and back. I gave it more and more rest, to make the swelling go away.(one doctor back then even said that don’t stop speaking, but for me it didn’t make sense cause my throat felt so swollen and nerve pinching pain was quite bad). So I gave it more and more rest and as the time went on, about a year from the injury, I could only speak about 20 minutes a day.
And it was difficult to avoid the swelling feeling and pain away, so I gave it more and more rest, until it became so bad that last year I couldn’t even laugh and this swelling feeling came back. It has since got minimally better now, but still I can only laugh about 5 times a day or less. My question is, if I start to practice again and ignore the swelling feeling in my throat and the nerve pain, would it injure me even more. That’s what I’m worried about. If someone told me that “100%, you will not injure your voice more when practicing through the pain”, then I would start. The last doctor said exactly that, but I needed to get a second opinion somewhere else, because I’m scared to injure my vocal chords even worse, to the point that I could lose my vocal chords forever. Thank you for reading it the whole way through and I would love to hear your opinion! Thank you in advance! :)
Please ASAP go see an ENT that specializes in singing and have then give you a scope of the vocal cords. Make sure they have state of the art cameras and video equipment and will give you copies of the video and images they take. If they don't have the ability to do that, see someone who can. It's important to get there as soon as possible.
Yo, if you’re not willing to expose your voice, and embarrass yourself trying to become an amazing singer, you’ll never get good. Simple as that. So stop complaining y’all and do your, “ney ney’s!”
For some reason when I do the bubbles I cant get past E without switching to falsetto, but I can do the other exercises all the way in chest. What should I do?
Yes...this is not unique. Broadway producers have been known to dismiss the whole cast and rehire a fresh one, after wearing out the first cast's voices doing exactly what you described.
In my mind i know i can do all the stuff the singers i like can if I put effort to try learning all that, but when I actually try to sing, suddenly I'm extremely self aware and also aware of the neighbors, and lose all my confidence someone help
This will help: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-uFhH7mqs2jc.htmlsi=kcGwQRRBbQbw8HB5 Take lessons from a great vocal coach. Get your confidence in your technique...just enough to sing in an open mic or karake with friends or family. And do it a lot!. That which we persist in doing becomes easier. Not that the nature of the thing as changed, but our ability to do it has increased.
thanks for this! will be doing these exersises to strengthen my tone, I don't have a 'power' voice butI think that everyone has a voice and it's healthy to sing, much appreciated sir!
Sure you can. Keep after it. I learned after I was 43 years old. You can do it. These may also help: ru-vid.com/group/PLc6YT-50Ji8EzWKaWWpi5vNrQ2ZV3_0At&si=HUO-i8izCkSyKYle
Thank you! I don't know music theory but I do love to sing! When I'm singing I can usually do vibrato but it isn't that versatile so I wanted to improve.