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Hi. I'm Anya Singleton. We're going to talk about how to sing open tones.
That means something different depending on what kind of singer you are.
Are you an opera singer or you a jazz singer? Basically, what I mean by
open tones is being able to keep the throat open so that the tone is pure
and it is not fettered by strain or anything like that.
A nice simple exercise for that, we talked about humming and sirens
earlier. Those are great because you're running through the gamut with your
voice and relaxing it. I like to do an exercise where I smile it up real
big and fake, and you want to keep the cheek bones up really, really high,
and then you want to breath in on a K. What that does is that it opens up,
it pushes the soft pallet away from the base of the tongue and it opens up
the throat. When you do it, you should feel some cool air come in. If you
do it correctly, then that will open up the whole throat. If I do that and
then approach singing . . . nice and open, no strain through the neck, no
strain through the chin. We tend to hold a lot of tension in the jawbone,
none of that. We should even be able to do it as we get higher if we're
keeping it nice and open, doing that, I call it a K-stretch. Nice and open,
relaxed, even though that's higher, no strain.
That's a great exercise to do. It looks a little crazy, but I feel it
really works because it forces everything to open up with you thinking so
hard about hitting a note. Especially as we get higher, a lot of vocal
exercises we do are geared to keep going up and up the scale. Like most of
us, you're going to think, "Oh, my God. I'm getting higher and higher. I'm
not going to get to the top of this," but you will. If you feel like you're
not, stop, do some of those stretches. Open up the throat and you'll find
that getting an open tone is easier.
I think another tip is to think about using open vowel sounds, like an,
'ah' or an 'ooh'. Try to avoid maybe E, that closes the sound in close to
the teeth. Those are great, I happen to love E, but I think if you're
looking for open tones, especially if you have a ballad with a lot of long
and sustained notes, then that's the best way to do it. Focus on opening up
the throat, being able to sustain the note, and take your time with it.
I think another thing to do, a lot of vocal exercises we do are fast
because you want to make sure that you're in the pitch and you're moving up
the scale. Do it slow, take your time, do half an octave, stop. Do another
half, start up here, come down here, move around; just get comfortable with
it. Then pretty soon, you'll be able to do an open tone no matter where you
are in your personal scale.