5 Simple Tips to Bolster Your Performances

I was recently at a training event, and I got to sit in on a masterclass with a Master Teacher of IVA – Spencer Welch, who can be found at www.spencerwelch.com. He spent time with a handful of performers getting them to hone their performance and practice performance techniques to further engage them with the audience. In short-hand, here are the highlights:

1) Direct complete ideas to particular sections of the audience – By dividing up the audience – however large or small – into sections, it becomes easier to address particular sections of the audience. Many people know this technique. However, many people often think that they need to frantically look from place to place… instead, try addressing lines of the song that reflect a complete individual idea to one section, then for the next idea pick another section to address that idea to. This makes people feel like you are actually talking to them, telling them something, inviting them in to a conversation with you.

2) Change hands that you use to hold the microphone – Many times, people stand still with their hands by their side, unable to move or feel relaxed, and are rigid for the whole performance. There are also other performers who strut about stage frantically throughout the performance. Both become tiresome, because there is no variety. Actually, the slightest bit of change can introduce needed variety. As simple as changing hands that you use to hold the microphone can make a huge difference. Just remember to do this between complete ideas in the song, otherwise it can feel rehearsed rather than natural.

3) Don’t leave your microphone stand centre stage – Center-stage is the power position for the whole performance. Don’t leave your microphone hogging that power position. You can move it out of the way, drag it round with you, but YOU are the performer – you are who people are there to see, not your mic stand.

4) Don’t always stand right up to the microphone – If you see someone standing with their lips touching a microphone, your natural expectation is that they are about to start singing any second now. Even a few seconds delay between being right up against the microphone and starting to sing can leave an audience feeling confused about what is meant to be happening. If you are not going to be singing for a period of time, try backing away from the microphone until you are ready to sing again – this makes it abundantly clear to the audience what is going on and helps them to feel comfortable during your performance.

5) Practice songs with these moves – Spencer pointed out that performances are over 50% visual – how you look, how you move, how you appear can make or break a performance. The way you move about stage, how natural or UN-natural you look can win over or alienate an audience. We spend so much time honing our ability on voice, guitar, piano, other instruments, etc, but how often do we practice stage-craft? How often do we work through a song and think ‘how should this LOOK to the audience?’ The best bit of advice Spencer gave on top of all these tips, is to practice them in front a mirror and get used to them until they feel and look natural.

I’ll confess and say this post is a little over 500 words, but it’s such helpful advice to practice and get better at. It really does alleviate nerves and improve your performance. Can’t recommend these tips enough!

Learn More: Related Articles

If you want to learn more about performing and improving your own performances you may enjoy these related articles:
Performance Anxiety: What is it, where does it come from, what can we do about it
Performance Workshop with Rhonda Carlson: Part 1
Performance Workshop with Rhonda Carlson: Part 2
Performance Workshop with Rhonda Carlson: Part 3
Ease, Strain, Time to think: Improve your performances easily
Pacing yourself: Micro- and macro- rests in songs and sets

The Key to Vocal Consistency

A number of students ask me about ‘vocal consistency’, how one day their voice feels great and they can do anything with it… and the next it feels horrible and it won’t even string a couple of words together… how can we develop a voice that is relatively consistent one day to the next?

There is a straight-forward answer, but…

… unfortunately the voice is an organic instrument. It’s affected by fatigue, humidity, temperature, hormones, and a host of other things. That’s not to say everyone is badly affected by each of these factors, some people are more susceptible than others, but it’s a fact of life that we need to learn to deal with.

Simple but time-consuming

One of the main precepts of the technique we use in lessons is that the vocal cords are capable of doing everything we ask them to do provided that we let them do their job properly. The exercises we use are designed to help you be introduced the what your vocal cords are capable of doing, and to reinforce that correct behaviour. So there is a degree of awareness that this is possible – which builds trust in your voice – and a degree of practicing those co-ordinations – which builds muscle memory.

The challenge lies in spending sufficient time experiencing the vocal cords doing their thing correctly AND often enough that we can trust the muscle memory that is inbuilt and that we have enhanced through doing the exercises.

The answer then?

The answer to consistency, is to practice doing it right, and keep doing it. The exercises ensure that we are using our vocal cords correctly. We then just need to keep repeating the ones that are providing us with the correct vocal co-ordination to further in-grain that behaviour. The consistency will come with consistent and effective application of the exercises.

In other posts I’ve likened the operation of the voice to the way that a piano is configured and tuned to have a consistent quality throughout. In a similar way, the exercises are like the act of building, configuring and tuning an instrument like the piano, so that the notes are simply accessible without reaching up or pressing down – you can just trust that the notes are there.

Don’t be disheartened…

For some people, their voices can be quite stubborn, and it takes a while for that muscle memory – and more importantly a reliance on that muscle memory – to take hold. For some people, it’s a more or less instantaneous thing – they do it right once, and it lands them squarely in the ballpark of what they should be doing within a few exercises. Everyone is different, but the key to consistency for all of us is this:

Step 1: Do It Right Once
Step 2: Repeat Step 1 as often as necessary.

Learn More: Related Articles

If you want to learn more about vocal technique and great singing, you may enjoy these related articles:
The Difference between Amateurs and Pros
The problem with trying to teach voice using ONLY voice science
Vocal Pedagogy: Past, present and future
Singers: The Difference Between Vocalists and Performers
Can vocal technique help laryngitis?
Vocal Tessitura: What is it?
What is vocal fach?

Songwriting: The Craft of Songwriting Made Easy/Hard

I was recently watching a Youtube seminar by a guy called Ralph Murphy.

Who?

Well, most of you will never have heard of him, and I hadn’t either, but he is a songwriter of over 50 years, has toured the world as a performer, writer and teacher, and is presently a Vice-President within ASCAP (American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers). He tours internationally giving seminars on songwriting and giving insight into what it takes to make a hit song and keep doing it. He really does break it down and make it easy to understand just how hard it is to craft a song that makes it big.

 

Here is the Youtube video:

If you don’t have the time to watch the full video, here is a link to a blogpost by someone who has helpfully discussed the things that stood out to him from Ralph’s instruction.

Stop Releasing Every Song

Check out one or both of these links, and try some of these techniques out. You will notice a big difference in your final products if you do.

John Mayer – Something Like Olivia (Acoustic in the Studio)

The highlight of last night’s youtube bender.

I was introduced to John Mayer almost a decade ago when he hadn’t quite made it onto everyone’s radar, and one or two of his songs grabbed me, but not all of them. Since then he’s reinvented himself a number of times, to escalating success each time. I’ll be doing a blog post on him in the future, but for now, just enjoy this acoustic version of ‘Something Like Olivia’.