If I could go back in time…

In a practice session of my own a while ago, I was cogitating on something I had been figuring out (mentioned in point 2 below).

It struck me how I wish I could have gone back in time to tell my younger self this. There’d be no guarantee my younger, more arrogant self would listen, but such is the folly of youth!

As I pondered this, I realised there were also a few other nuggets I wish I could have been given earlier in my singing career. And if every singer could take on board some of these, well, maybe their future voice in 10 years would be further ahead of where they would otherwise be.

So here are three, deceptively simple tips that I wish my younger self had been given:

1. Put in at least a little vocal work every day, and you’ll be amazed where you’ll be in 10 years.

Einstein (allegedly) referred to compound interest as the 8th wonder of the world. The stock market is a great illustration of this idea, where if you put a little away every month for a few decades earning a few percent interest, you will have a ludicrous pot waiting for you at the end of it. Vocal “compound interest” is the same. Daily, consistent and sustainable practice adds up.

Now, it must be said that I’ve always been a practice-a-holic. I have no problem sitting down to practice for hours with minimal interruptions. But is this always good? Or is it even necessary?

To some extent it is good, but remember, we are playing the long game. We need to see our voices as investments in their own right, and tailor our practice to what we can personally manage. This means we need to figure out a sustainable amount of practice day to day is the best option for everyone.

Even just 5-15 minutes can go a LONG way when deployed consistently. You don’t want to bite off more than you can chew (generating vocal damage or days we need to recover on). The key thing is that the practice “investment” gets done. The consistency is what will generate the results.

2. Force only gets you so far

I almost called this “muscle vs resonance”. MANY singers and voice coaches (including my younger self) emphasise the importance of what is happening at the vocal fold level, e.g. generate even more muscular contraction of the vocal folds to generate more power.

People assume this muscular component is the dominant factor in getting a big sound. Well, it’s certainly a foundational component, but the more developed you become as a singer, the more important resonance becomes. This is critical in the higher ranges.

Resonance is a lot trickier to explain to people, because it’s not a mechanical thing (like the vocal folds vibrating), but it’s a by-product of your vocal tract forming a particular shape. This then enhances what your vocal folds are kicking out. And it takes a LONG time chipping away at this to develop and curate a big sound. No one exercise will unlock this, and it takes time. Hence the importance of point 1.

My point is, generating power only has its roots in what we can do muscularly. Past a certain point we need to cultivate resonance to make what would otherwise be a tiny sound, sound much much bigger.

3. Find a vocal template

Now THIS is a relatively advanced concept. The essence of it is as follows…

While there is no one else vocally quite like you in the world, there are already very similar sounding voices out there. They may not be identical, but they are similar enough that you can use them as a template. They have been gifted with similar instruments, and they have already figured out how your shared kind of instrument works.

By finding finding those singers and retracing their steps, we can work out how to get the best out of our own instruments faster. They’ve already done the heavy lifting, so we don’t need to grope around in the dark to figure out what may sound good.

Couple of caveats to mention:
1) At the start, your voice and your ear will be too undeveloped to accurately assess whose instrument you are similar to. Don’t worry about it. Start somewhere and adjust as you go.
2) As your voice develops, what is an appropriate vocal template will shift. This is also normal. We are looking for someone who’s voice is mirroring what we are presently experiencing, and that is going to adjust.
3) You are not trying to MIMIC that singer, but to learn their moves (a bit like dance moves) as it’s likely your voice will find those exact moves fairly easy to assimilate.

To sum up

These things might seem remarkably simple in principle, or in the message of subtle caution, but the big results they’ve generated in my voice and client’s voices belie how simple they sound. Do take these on board and trust that they’ll pay off in the years to come.

If you’d like to explore some of these concepts in your own voice, you can book in a session with me using my booking form right here.

Why some people sound better than others?

Why Do Some Singers Sound Better Than Others at the Start?


Here’s something I think about a lot: when it comes to singers first starting out, why is it that some people seem to sound better than others off the bat?

We’ve all met singers who have never worked on their voice, not tried singing for very long, but they sound seemingly decent without any training or real work.

To be clear, hard work beats talent every time, but I’m talking about before anyone has tried to do any work on their voice – why do some people appear to sound better out of the gate?

A lot of you reading this (myself included) may well have found ourselves at the opposite end of the spectrum when we first started, despite trying our hardest to improve. Some of us may feel we started at one end and moved towards the other as time wore on.

Over the years I’ve noticed this trend, along with a few others that seem intertwined with this topic, and I’ve reached a few conclusions on this topic. While I can’t scientifically prove all of the following hypotheses, I thought I’d share a few of my thoughts on this.

1. Genetic Lottery

I remember hearing a story years ago, when a number of singers went to have their voices examined with a camera down their throat. Now, there’s a particular component of the vocal tract that is heavily responsible for making the physics of singing feel much easier. The narrower this particular length of the vocal tract is, the easier transitioning from low to high is, and the more effortless it can feel to traverse one’s voice. It just makes the physics of singing MUCH easier and more efficient. The reverse is also true.

One particular singer had such a narrowness in this portion of their vocal tract that the scope could barely see past it to the larynx! This person was LUDICROUSLY advantaged physiologically, such that they found singing incredibly natural and easy from day one. So even without any training whatsoever, some singers are at a distinct advantage over others in terms of their physiological makeup… but see point 4 before you want to curse them too much.

2. Some People’s Vocal Tone and Aesthetic Is More In Vogue Than Others

Consider the physique of actors and models we see in magazines and on television today. Now, if you’ve ever seen models/actors from the 80s, or the 60s, or even the 40s, consider how the leading actors/models look very different compared to those from different decades.

The kind of aesthetic someone needs to land a career today would likely mean they would not be first pick or even get a look in in another decade.

The point is, aesthetics change a LOT over the years. Combine this with the inherent genetic component that determines a lot about our tonal signature, sometimes what we THINK is a great sounding singer is really just an on-trend singer, and that waxes and wanes.

At the moment, very masculine sounding women and very effeminate sounding men are in vogue. So if you don’t fall within that ballpark as a man/woman, then you are less likely to be heard as favourably as someone who is… but that changes every few years.

So don’t beat yourself up if you’re not in vogue right now, but also don’t let your ego get too inflated if you just happen to be on trend right now either. Things change.

3. What We Hear in Our Head

One of the hardest things to get your brain around is that you are the ONLY person in the world who doesn’t hear your voice the way everyone else does. You hear it from inside your head, and therefore it sounds quite different to how it sounds in the real world. This makes it difficult to exactly gauge how you sound out front when in the act of singing.

Here’s something I suspect but can never prove: I think that for some people, what they hear in their head is very closely representative of how they actually sound outside their own head. What they hear in their head is therefore very close to what everyone else hears. Whereas for others I think what they hear in their head is much more divergent, so they’ve got their work cut out to try and map the “inside of their head” sound to the “real world” sound of their voice.

Now there’s no way to measure what someone ‘feels’ inside their head, and compare it to someone else’s. However, I’ve worked with over a thousand voices at this point in my career, and I notice that some people seem to be very tuned-in to how their voice sounds out front, and others hear something VERY different to how they actually sound. Obviously, the more representative what someone hears inside their head is of their singing, the easier it should be to monitor and influence their vocal output.

4. Some People’s Sound Peaks for a Particular Period of Time

Today, we see a lot of celebrity singers get a great sound at 18, a mediocre second album in their early 20s, vocal problems in their late 20s, and then we never hear from them again.

Whereas in the operatic world, you won’t get any traction until your early 40s, maybe even late 30s at the earliest. There’s a lot of training and vocal work in this world we can’t ignore for the purposes of the topic above, but bear with me.

The point is that, per the aesthetics point above, some people look a bit odd when they are young, but grow into their features as they get older. Others are stunning when they are younger but don’t seem to carry it off so well as they get older. Just because someone may seem “on it” at one stage in their life, does not mean that they will carry it off as they move through life. Again, things change.

With training, we can build our voices to only keep getting better with age and develop to match our preferred musical genre and aesthetic. However, without any training, sometimes it’s just a particular confluence of factors that mean someone’s voice (per the genetic lottery) meshes well with current aesthetics (per whatever is in vogue) such that they get a lot of attention at that moment in time. But as they age, as the accepted vocal aesthetics evolve, they find they are not recognised to the same degree.

To Finish Off

Some of these are established and known in science and the vocal world. Others of these are conjecture. I’ve got still more thoughts on this topic, but I’ll leave it there for now.

With training, we can accomplish a lot. Hard work beats talent every time. If you feel you don’t sound good right now, then seek out and further good training for yourself. If you feel you do sound good now, then be grateful but don’t sit on your laurels. Train your voice to keep pace with it as it slowly changes, and so you can deliver great sound even as the world changes also.

More Book Recommendations

I was catching up with a friend recently, and I told him about a difficult conversation I ended up having with someone. When I told him the whole story, he was gobsmacked at how I’d managed to keep my patience.

Truth be told, most of that was down to one particular book I’ve read this year, which is one of the books I want to recommend to you today. In turn, this made me realise it’s been a while since I made such recommendations, so there’s a few more thrown in for good measure.

How To Have Impossible Conversations

This is written by Peter Boghossian. He is an American academic who, in the opening chapters, used to be “that guy” in conversations. He might know all the facts, he might even be right, but he would be a colossal ***hole through delivering his point. So much so he’d usually cause the other person to become combative, and no productive discussion was to be had. Continue reading “More Book Recommendations”

Artistry Requires Choices

This is a concept I talk about with clients a fair bit, especially as they start to carve out their own artistic style and identity. That is, that artistry requires choice.

Whether we are writing a song, covering a song, reinterpreting a song, we have to make decisions as to how we will do certain things.

Like what Mark?

OK, let’s say you’re wanting to create a version of your favourite song. This might be to perform, record, or just for fun. Let’s say that you have free reign to do whatever you want to it, to change as much as you want, as little as you want, or maybe change nothing at all.

What choices do we have available to us?

Well, we could change some of the chords. Do I use this chord, or that chord? How fast should I move through the chords? For those who don’t accompany themselves this isn’t strictly applicable, but it’s still a valid choice.

We could also choose whether to jettison a verse in a song we like that always seemed a bit superfluous. Or we can choose to repeat a section we like, a section that we think the original didn’t linger on enough.

Maybe there’s an alternate melody or some style/riffs we can include that we feel enhance the song.

But for some people, changing ANYTHING from the original feels entirely wrong to them. That their goal should be to give the most accurate recreation of the original song possible. Continue reading “Artistry Requires Choices”

Unsingable Songs

Recently, someone brought in the song ‘Seasons’ by Chris Cornell. Now I’ve written before about how much my younger self loved the sound of Cornell’s voice. While discussing the range of Cornell’s voice, his tone, etc, we got to discussing how achievable it would be to sing his songs.

And that’s how we got onto the idea of some songs being ‘unsingable’.

But what do I mean by unsingable?

It’s easier to think of it as a spectrum from ‘more accessible’ to ‘less accessible’. How accessible (or inaccessible) a song is to sing is down to a few different factors: Continue reading “Unsingable Songs”

Singers That Changed My Life

We all have pieces of music or singers that bring out certain feelings in us, that create a lasting impression on us that transcends just a “nice piece of music“. But in some cases, a piece of music or a singer’s voice can be literally life-changing.

And for me, I’ve got four singers that changed my life at different times. I heard each of them at very specific times in my life, and in some cases, I literally would not be where I am today if it wasn’t for their music hitting me like it did.

1. Elton John

When I was about 10/11 years old, I discovered Elton John’s greatest hits album in my parent’s record collection. I used to listen to it on repeat for hours at a time. It’s only looking back on it now I can see how much of my musical preferences stem from Elton’s approach. The interesting arrangements, the piano being front and centre, and dramatic yet moving melodies… not to mention the enormous catalogue of material he’s put out over the years.

Saturday Night’s Alright For Fighting” was probably my favourite. There’s also a very clever key change between every verse and chorus, but it’s covert rather than overt… and I love that.


Continue reading “Singers That Changed My Life”

The Worst Voice I’ve Ever Heard

This story is going back a while, maybe 10-15 years ago. We had some friends round. One of those friends had some of their university friends visiting them, and they came along to our house as well.

One of those friends of friends heard that I was a voice coach, and they said “Oh, I’m a singer, I’ve just done my grade 8 vocals and got a distinction“.

Well of course, my curiosity was piqued! So I offered to run through a few exercises with them and see what we could do with their voice.

I started them off with the standard assessment… and what came out was diabolically bad.

How bad was it?!

It was all in tune, but it was the weakest thing I’ve heard come out of a “singer” even to this day.

It was so breathy and weak, I had to set the digital piano I teach from to the quietest setting to hear them. It was not much more than someone breathing out but with some semblance of pitch to it.

Their range was so impaired, they had less than an octave of range to their voice. At either extreme their voice became just fully disappeared into pure air and breath.

Put bluntly, there is no way that person could ever sing a song with what they were doing with their voice, let alone be heard by anyone else whilst doing it.

But they’ve got a grade 8 in singing… with distinction?

Quite! If grades actually mean anything at all, this doesn’t add up. How can someone with basically no useable singing voice have achieved a grade 8 in singing? I asked them to tell me about what singing they’d done previously. Continue reading “The Worst Voice I’ve Ever Heard”

The Most Repetitious Part of Singing

So, what’s the most repetitious part of singing practice?

It’s the repetitions.

Thanks for reading!
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Horrendous jokes aside, there’s no getting away from it. To polish a song takes repetition. I’ve written this article about putting in the reps, and I’ve written several others that orbit around the same theme… how repetitious of me.

For many people, repetitions become tedious. It’s one of the reasons few people stick at the gym, or running. Sticking at anything that involves long durations of going over the same ground again and again with ever increasing precision and focus, is not something that comes naturally.

That’s the scope of today’s article. I just want to make two simple points then wrap it up. Continue reading “The Most Repetitious Part of Singing”

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