After 6 months of training, I went from squeezing F4s to consistently hitting A4-B4s in chest. Everything changed once I started letting my body do the heavy lifting instead of my throat.
@@sparshgoyal3050 Expand the rib cage when you breathe and keep it expanded. There should NO tension in the throat at any point. Keep your jaw low and loose. Instead of "pushing" the sound, sing "inwards" as if you're trying to bounce the sound off your soft palate. By not pushing, you're taking the strain off your larynx. If the support is there, your jaw is relaxed, and there's no tension in the throat - you should be able to sing past your break with ease.
@@deathrattle216 My g, thanks so much. Imma try this out for a few months and Imma update if I manage to sing better. If you got any specific exercises, lemme know :)))
I was playing ‘the #1 thing you must master” , running through warm ups to those types from your library Btw your input has advanced my voice quality so much. I’ve got these psychosomatic blocks I had to hurdle with projecting (“belting”) from being conditioned to stay quiet & out of the way. So I focus on breath, but find these exercises particularly difficult not to strain a little. It’s also hard to tell if my throat feels the way it does from inexperience, or bad form.
I can't do a squeak except at an extremely low volume, and I haven't ever found squeaking to be useful toward regular singing. I can make squeak sounds more easily if NOT warmed up, but it's unreliable. Its more like a flageolet register, but, again, it's useless to me for regular singing. My connected NORMAL voice only currently goes up to a G#4 at best, and my disconnected breathy falsetto only goes up to a B4 below Tenor high C. Used to get to an E5 or F5 in breathy falsetto. Used to get to B in connected normal head voice. I've had my folds scoped and I'm doing voice therapy and vocal lessons but still no big breakthrough toward getting back the top of my usable range. I bought your book but haven't delved into it yet. I think something happened to reduce range over the years but it's not something the ENT was able to see through a scope.