A calm and peaceful man once said: "🌸have you ever wanted to learn to scream like this? *summons satan with the most unholy sounds* 🌸Well, i am gonna show you how ☺️"
I wasn't expected "that's what she said" at 4:04 but the delivery was perfect xD perhaps it was obligatory to prevent 17 people in the comments from saying it lol
I know how to scream, but I don't *know* how to scream - it's just a thing I can do, but don't understand haha. This video has made me feel a lot less clueless about what I'm doing with my voice! Thanks for making it!
This is why I desperately need a studio where I can practice and improve. I think I stand a pretty damn good chance at doing this very well I already have a great low growl think of a panther or cougar and I can do that reasonably well I have been doing it for a long time so I have that mastered. The hardest part for me is the vocal breaking point it's very difficult for me to keep going without worries about blowing out my vocal cords I have done a few on my vocal range I can go low to high and get 3 octaves which I would say is very well for a non-professional. A lead singer I met before said my voice reminds him of Hank Williams when I sing
when you're doing the vocal break exercise, it should be relaxed. it shouldnt blow out your vocal cords, that would mean you're pushing too much air through. focus on finding the placement thats comfortable before adding air GRADUALLY. good luck on ur screaming journey!
I'm actually working on just a high distortion here, but that doesn't really change much. Clarified a lot, confirmed my suspicion that Chris Liepe's break method is just another way of getting fry going (which was not clear).
giving more air =/= compression if you're just blowing more air through, its not the same as compressing your diaphragm. try making a "hut" sound without the "t" (as if you're trying to pick something heavy up). that is proper compression. adding that to the fry scream and getting the balance right should solve your problems! If you're still struggling, I do offer lessons :D (email me at junsimmusic@gmail.com if interested)
Your screams are sick! What do you say to people who say screaming in falsetto is not safe? I am able to fry scream in falsetto but stopped due to fear of hurting myself and starting to try to learn a different way, not really sure if I need to though. it seems easier for me in falsetto and less forced than when I eliminate the falsetto note underneath
theres a lot, and i mean A LOT, of misinformation about screams on the internet. There is an argument to be made that when you scream with alot of breath in your scream (i.e. people associating that sound with falsetto), it can dry out your vocal cords really quickly. But as I mentioned in my video, if you use compression with your fry scream, it'll eliminate that breathiness and sort of get rid of the danger of "breathy" screams. However, I'm not an expert so take this with a pinch of salt lol
This is because to get the sound it’s more about compression to create the distortion. I used Andy’s method and I was just hurting my voice. Try to sing some screamed tracks and you can see how BS that method is. The other one kinda works but again, it’s about adding some distortion when you see that voice starts cracking. There are no shortcuts and it just takes practice, but I am astonished by the amount of misinformation there is on youtube. Vocal fry gives you a starting point but it’s easier singing a note and adding some distortion which can be done by using the muscles you use to poop or when lifting something heavy.
@@toddroba9972 yes something like that, but it depends on what you want to achieve. The key is just letting some air passing through, some singers are using different compression of air to create that distorted sound but do not absolutely use vocal fry, this technique is used by some bands like electric callboy, but they are not screaming with this vocal fry which will just hurt your voice and also limit the scream. Check the beginning of We Got The Moves where in the first part they are using the vocal fry.
Hello, thank you for the excellent explanation, I do the noise fry well and correctly, and I also know falsetto, but I can't combine the two to make it scream, in fact, my scream is powerless, will this part take time? ? Or do you have any special advice?
Transitioning from the vocal fry to the dry scream is alil bit tricky, you need to tense the right muscles in your throat to make the projected noise. My best advice (aside from getting lessons) would be to just keep experimenting!
I adore Fry Screaming & I do it correctly but I keep getting told that fry screaming shouldn't be used for whole songs/long amount of time as I do feel a bit tired after doing it for a long duration due to the compression, is this normal? I'm a clean singer aswell! I've been told to move to false chord for more dominating screams that last but I just really love Fry more!
I think that's a misconception, there are many singers that use fry screams for a majority of their live screaming and they don't seem to be damaging their voice. I would say the biggest things to work on is to improve your stamina (via cardio) and experimenting with different configurations of screams. Sometimes you can get the same "sound" with less effort via messing with airflow/compression.
saliva and mucus buildup can be due to insufficient warmups, dehydration, improper technique or all 3 at the same time. I'd suggest looking into 1. drinking more water 2. warm up longer 3. stop when your throat starts to hurt/burn hope it helps!