Showing posts with label performing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label performing. Show all posts

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Curtain Up! Light the Lights!!

Curtain UP, Light the Lights!

(A Discussion on Authentic Performance Aspects)

You will notice that I put up a lot of songs on the various profile pages I have all over the web. And it’s not to show off…well…not entirely.

I put the songs up there because when I record them, while I can get a vague idea of whether or not they reflect my inner self, I don’t have sufficient objectivity to make a concrete decision about what songs to put on a CD I am preparing for this Summer, so feedback is important.

Of course, when we seek objectivity, we’re not always thrilled with the responses we get from others, are we? Well, after all, we’re human, right? But we should, all of us, embrace the feedback, whatever form it takes, ‘cause it simply makes us better!

And Sure! I love it when I get positive feedback on my singing, but my job here is primarily to teach, not perform.

Perform! That’s your job! And that’s what we’re going to talk about today.

I found some old articles I wrote years ago on the subject of what makes an authentic performance, and I’m going to try an string a few of them together to articulate what I think are some key components that create the Magic!

So let’s begin…

There are 3 elements that come to mind right off the bat:

  • Song Choice
  • The Quality of your Communication
  • Gotta Have a Gimmick – Really?

SONG CHOICE

(some excerpts taken from SYL Newsletter April, 2004)

"The Song is You"

The words to this old standard suddenly invaded my dreams the other night and I awoke with a new revelation. Although it is a romantic love song, the last 2 lines seemed to speak to me of something else...something genuine, authentic, and true...kinda like the way I want you to sing.

The words to the last lines are, "The music is sweet, the words are true. The song is you".

When I talk to you about being real when you sing, I am talking about choosing songs that are comfortable to you in style and mood, as well as lyrics and melody. When you choose comfortable songs that say what you want to say, AND are based on your beliefs, your traditions, your customs, your upbringing and environment, then you ARE the song, and the song is YOU!

Finding Your Song

I grew up in NYC and was influenced by Jazz and Broadway musical styles.

Jazz songs feel very natural for me...the way jazz notes are bent and improvised feels familiar and comfortable, and when I sing Broadway songs, they flow from me with an effortlessness that feels as if I could go on singing for hours and hours.

Yes, I'll sing a Country tune when asked, or Pop power-ballad, or a rock tune, or even an Art Song if requested on a job to do so, but although I can appreciate and perform all musical genres, if I were to choose an audition song to fully express my essence, it would have to be a Jazz tune, a standard, or something from Broadway.

And the reason for this is that as early as I can recall, the sounds of the melodies, harmonies and rhythms contained within these 2 styles drifted through our house non-stop. Examine your roots to find music that fully expresses you!

I have students who love the Jazz style, yet find it difficult to negotiate through jazz nuances that are not part of their comfort zones. They simply sound better, freer, looser, more confident when they sing in styles that are part of who they are. It's where they can best express their own essence.

The Singer's Comfort Zone

Now I can hear you saying, "WAIT, Chrys! Are you saying that we should never venture out of our comfort zone? How can we ever grow if we don't?"

That's a good question! And "No", I'm not saying don't widen the border lines of your comfort zone.

On the contrary, we should always be willing to stretch ourselves through our performances. And especially, if you wish to work as a professional entertainer, you just gotta know a whole lotta tunes for when customers make requests.

We can also stretch ourselves within our own style. For instance, if we're used to clutching the microphone, we should try sometimes to sing with the mic in the

stand and our hands free. And we should try to stretch our range and to listen to music that is popular, but may not be what we would normally purchase at Tower Records.

But everyone has a center where the music of the heart lives and breathes. In this place is where the Song and the Singer are ONE. And it's where you are at your very best!

And you can find that place by singing in as many different styles as you can, and then checking yourself out.

Do you find it hard to breathe in places; notes that are inside your range, but still not easy to hit, rhythms that seem to pull you off track, phrases that get stuck in your throat?

If "yes", then while you can sing these songs on a job if asked to, they are not the songs of your heart, and you'd never want to sing them at an audition or competition. Songs of your deepest soul expression flow from you

like honey; effortless, fluid, smooth, sweet and clear.

You can read more about choosing the right songs for yourself by reading “The Art of Stage Presence”, because song choice and stage presence are related…and how…for when you sing a song that’s comfortable, you really connect with your listeners!

(from SYL newsletter, May, 2007)

It's so important to choose correct material to sing, people. Choosing songs to

perform is like trying on coats. They need to make you look good, feel good and fit you well. So it's important to know who you are as an artist.

I am delighted to say that we have a great deal of experienced and more mature singers here in this online community, who are most aware of what works for

them, probably because we have had more life experiences, but you younger singers can sharpen your song selection skills too...just by understanding your particular style, connecting with the lyrics, and knowing exactly how to pitch the song into the "meat" of your voice.

My teenager students will tell you that I will not let them perform a song until they understand every single word of the lyric.

You can also reread more about song choice in the March 1, 2009 posting, which is already on the blog at www.SingYourLife.com/blog

THE QUALITY OF COMMUNICATION

(some excerpts taken from SYL Newsletter of April, 2003)

Being Yourself!

I have found that once a student of singing has established firmly the fundamentals that are given in "The Art of Singing”, (previously titled, “A Voice For A Lifetime in 30 Days"), and is ready to start performing regularly, something strange begins to occur. The progress made in the learning process of the correct way to produce sound seems to slow to a crawl.

I have wondered about this since the occurrence happens to almost every one of my students who have apparently gone through the fundamentals of vocal training, and feel that they have mastered the principles which are breathing, creating the sound, using all the body's resonation chambers, supporting tone with the diaphragm, and avoiding the Seven Deadly Sins of Singing.

What seems to occur is that the singer, having successfully made the transition between the drills and the songs, at least to their satisfaction, quite inexplicably and suddenly performs without any truth, or real expression of self!

When we are learning how to sing correctly, we move from just doing the exercises to singing familiar favorite tunes while applying the fundamentals we are learning.

This is good, for since we are programming the body's cell and muscle memory patterns, we MUST USE the principles of singing in an actual song.

But something else MUST eventually occur in order to be a performer.

And that something is the quality of communication, in other words, the level of realness. How can we express our feelings in a song using correct technique alone? We CANNOT!!

Everyone has parts of our personality or character that we hide from others. We all do this in our day-to-day experiences. We replace our deep-seeded fears and negative opinions of others and even ourselves behind a mask, or a “persona”, that may show as real enough, but really isn’t.

During a Performance -

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Now, when these negative feelings show up in a performance as discomfort; maybe by forgetting a line of lyrics , or a distraction of some sort like missing a note you were going for, and getting stuck in that moment of failure, your level of confidence and hence your “persona” identity can usually go out the window.

Remember when I told you that performing takes courage? I wasn't speaking about the courage to stand in front of an audience and sing. That can be learned and as you build your confidence in your abilities, it gets easier and easier.

No! I am speaking of the courage it takes to ALLOW all of your hidden fears and discomforts to SHOW to an audience!

I can hear you say, “WHAT? Are you serious? Expose my weaknesses to an audience? And have them laugh me off the stage??

My experience -

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

When I was a student at the High School of Music and Art in NYC, I considered myself quite clumsy, and although I was very talented vocally, I never tried out for any school productions that required dancing because I was afraid being humiliated at the auditions by not being able to dance very well or really at all. I couldn’t even fake it by being graceful, so I missed out on many a role that I could have probably been great on because of my fear.

Later on in college, I continued to play it safe, by singing with a small band in a

club with a small stage that limited my movements. This way I could disguise the fact that I thought of myself as homely and clumsy, even if I knew I could SING.

Peoples' comments on my performances back then were, "You sing so well. We enjoyed it." "You have a great voice". "Your range is exceptional!" "You have great pipes."

No one back then ever commented on how my performance made them feel.

It wasn't until my 30's that I discovered something quite by accident. I was singing in a Dinner Theater in Arizona, and was given a medley of songs to perform by the musical director.

The medley consisted of 3 songs about Rhythm, "I Got Rhythm", "Fascinatin' Rhythm", and "Crazy Rhythm". I had told the musical director that I really didn't think I could pull off this medley and begged him to give it to one of the other singers.

"No way!" he said.

"You are the best singer in the house. Why wouldn't you want to do it?"

I reluctantly admitted to being too clumsy to sing about rhythm. He laughed and said,

"I thought you'd know by now that a pro takes a deficit and turns it into an asset.

You are a pro! Do it as camp! Make it funny!"

That one phrase about turning a deficit into an asset changed my entire view of myself and my performance, and when I finally did perform the medley,

I purposely and exaggeratedly stepped all over my own feet, (A la Fannie Brice), and had the crowd in the palm of my hand. They roared with approval, and I learned that by revealing something that I had tried to hide for years, I was more accepted than ever before.

As the customers filed out of the theater that night, they said things like,

"You made us feel as if we have known you forever", "You are so expressive and funny, and we just love you!" "Your vulnerability really came through. Thank you!"

So what IS it that you don't want to show, singers? Do you have the courage to reveal it?

Reveal it to an audience? Dig down and search the corners of your psyche, singers! Don't be afraid of your weaker parts or even your darker parts! Have courage! Because the truth is, when you take that mike off of the stand, and hold it in your hand, THAT is the time and place when you can SAFELY be YOU… warts and all!

I want to say here that perfect vocal tone is NOT, repeat, NOT a prerequisite for giving an authentic, magical performance! There are performers out there who are still filling theaters and auditoriums whose voice have long since gone south, or even those who never really had a voice to begin with.

I am thinking of people like Elaine Stritch, Carol Channing, and yes, my idol of all time, Frankie. No, not Avalon, silly…Sinatra of course!!

By the time I got see him in person he was in his late 70’s and the “voice” was well worn by then. Years of alcohol and smoke abuse had stolen his once gloriously rich tones and he struggled for every note and every breath too.

But what time never took away was his charisma, the electricity he created just by standing there on stage with those piercing blue eyes.

A gorgeous instrument will go just so far and then….well, like Ray Charles said in an interview once, “I’d like to think that when I sing a song, I can let you know all about the heartbreak, struggle, lies and kicks in the ass I’ve gotten over the years for being black and everything else, without actually saying one word about it”.

Here’s something from a newsletter I wrote back in February, of 2005. It’s on Carol Channing and my experience upon hearing and watching her interviewed on PBS.

You younger singers may not be familiar with Carol Channing, but at age 85, I gotta tell ya, she is a force of nature! Not a great voice or a raving beauty by any measure, but quite an amazing entertainer!

Prior to the interview, she had given a performance and had held the audience spellbound for 1 1/2 hours...all alone on a large stage with a pianist in the pit. That ain't easy guys...A rather diminutive and frail-looking old lady on a huge stage...but this frail old lady can pull it off!

The interviewer asked her right off,

"How do you manage to keep an audience captivated as you just did for a full hour an a half?"

This got her talking about the art of performance, and it so validated my own views that I wanted to share her perspective with you singers.

She knew that she wasn't gorgeous even at 15 when she started performing.

In her 70 odd years of being on a stage, she discovered that if she sang to just one single individual in the audience and, to put it her words, "caught fire with him or her", the fire would spread and it wasn't long before the spark would ignite the entire audience.

And that was it! Just sing to one person, and it can even be a single person in your mind rather than physically in front of you.

She said that the trick was to focus on the one person and not on yourself. "If you listen", she said, "to the sound of your own voice, then no one will listen except you! So don't listen to yourself...just sing to that one person...have a conversation with one person, and all the rest will eavesdrop!"

So I tell you singers, STOP listening to yourself! STOP being so involved with your performance, the sound of your voice, the way you look, the movement of your hands, or feet...

SIMPLY FOCUS on someone other than yourself. Put your ego to bed and just COMMUNICATE! Then you've got something! You really have something!

Finally I want to tell those of you have come along with me on this network idea that it is okay of you decide you do not wish to post any of your music here. We all respect each other here and would never make you feel bad for just listening and watching.

I DID find it interesting however when years ago I sent out a survey to my entire mailing list to get an idea of what they needed from me that I could give them. One of the questions was “Do you believe you have talent?”

And over 80% of the answers to that one question came back as “NO”!

Shocked doesn't even describe my reaction! And my answer to them at that time was this:

“Now I know that what I'm going to say is going to get some heated responses, but I'm saying it! When have I ever been less than totally honest with you guys? Cannot and will not do that!

There are tons of voice teachers who figure since you will never actually see them, they can tell you what you want to hear and collect your money. The best teacher I ever had told me right off to be one thing above all other things!

BE REAL!!

So, pardon me if I have to question your answers to that question about your talent.

If you do not believe you have talent, why are you on this mailing list? Do you think you will somehow develop your talent by reading these newsletters? I'm sure none of you think that! I believe we have a uniquely intelligent group of singers on this list, so that cannot be it.

So what's this all about?

Here's what I think. You'll excuse my waxing philosophical here, but I was truly thrown by these responses, but in my attempts to analyze the results, I had some intriguing revelations.

I believe that we are afraid to claim our own inner talents for fear that once we take that on, the idea that we have talent, we'll be obligated to take a stand on it and actually use it!

I recently read part of a talk by Marianne Williamson, the creator if “A Course in Miracles” , which my son had framed and displays on the mantle in his apartment. It goes like this:

Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate.

Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure.

It is our light, not our darkness, that most frightens us.

We ask ourselves:

Who am I to be brilliant, (gorgeous, talented, fabulous?)

Actually, who are you not to be?

You are a child of God, You're playing small does not serve the World.

There is nothing enlightened about shrinking, so that other people won't feel insecure around you.

We were born to make manifest the glory of God that is within us.

It's not just in some of us: it's in everyone. And, as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. As we were liberated from our fear, our presence automatically liberates others.

Don't hide your lights, singers! Don't shrink from the power of your talent.

Maybe it's not completely developed yet, maybe there are cracks in your instrument at times, but it's there! Let the song live inside of you and freely share it as YOU and no one else!

Gotta Have Gimmick…Really? (from June, 2007)

I had this article all set to go last night, but after having dinner with my sister last night, I am altering it just a bit, I told her about the subject matter of my article and she said, "Well, of course!" And then bursting into song, (which we sisters are prone to always do), She sang, "You Gotta have a gimmick if you wanna be a star".

Then she said, "What about Bowie, and Elton John, and Boy George? They had gimmicks, and they were, and still are successful"!

So, I've been thinking about that...and I have concluded, as you will read down the page, that gimmicks are okay, AS LONG AS THEY COME FROM YOU! This shall be explained later.

Many years ago, in my capacity as a health care professional, (Yes, Virginia, even I lost my nerve and fell into the abyss of Corporate America for years), I had an occasion to attend a 2-day workshop on leadership and management skills. I don't remember a great deal of it, but I DO recall that we were given a short questionnaire to complete which would reveal the kind of leader, manager, instructor, etc. we were most similar to.

The choices were something like:

a)The Drill Sergeant: humorless and iron-fisted,

b)The Dilettante: negligent and indifferent

c)The Cheerleader: nurturing and supportive

d)The Effective Manager: fair and objective

As I recall, getting to Letter D was the goal of this particular workshop, and I suppose we all went back to our facilities vowing to be fair and objective, but within 2 weeks or so, we had slipped back into our comfort zone of management. Mine turned out to be (C), by the way.

And it’s true! Letter C is indeed who I am as a teacher and coach, as those of you who have directly experienced me can attest….or maybe not. LOL!

I tell you this because every now and then, and this would be one of those times, I need to "get real" with you people, and tell you things straightforwardly.

And I do you a shameful disservice if I don't drum some crucial truths home.

I received literally dozens of emails about the upcoming “Idol” auditions in August for next season. A few of you sent me clips and asked me straight out if I thought you had a chance at the auditions. Many of you wanted suggestions for gimmicks, to get past the pre-panel process, while others wanted to know what to wear to make them stand out.

While I answered each of you privately, I would like to encapsulate some of my thoughts here. You can take what I have to say at face value, and use it or

not, but basically singers, it all boils down to this:

IF YOU'RE NOT YOU, THEN WHO ARE YOU?

If the 15 minutes is enough for you, then you can work on a costume or a gimmick, and maybe you'll get on TV, but if a SINGING LIFE of some longevity and personal integrity is what you're after, well...hopefully, you'll get the picture.

Okay! Let's begin by asking you some questions:

1. Why do you sing? If your answer is anything but, "because I want to be famous", answer this next one: If your answer is “because I want to be famous”, STOP HERE! You need a reality check and undoubtedly a coach!

2. Why do you love to sing? Again, if your answer is anything but, "because my friends say I'm a great singer", then answer this next one: If your answer is "because my friends say I'm a great singer", STOP HERE and get 10 professional opinions!

3. Why do you NEED to sing? Your answer to this question reveals your inner motivation, and should look something like, "because I am driven to it, because I want to express myself", or "because when I sing, all is right with the world".

To those of you that answered all three questions, this article is for YOU!

I believe that singing is the most personal and subjective art form there is, and furthermore, that unlike dance, or painting, or writing, or even playing an instrument, SINGING, because it comes out YOUR MOUTH, has the potential to totally unwrap your outside persona and expose your inner essence. And because of this [exposure], it can be one TERRIFYING endeavor.

I mean, who wants to stand naked before the world, right?

Even acting can be excused if it reveals too much of YOU in the process. You can always say,

"I was just playing a part", right? But when you sing...when you perform a song, you are telling a story, and you are consciously or not, exposing yourself, your feelings and emotions about it to your audience. That is, IF you're doing it right!

With that in mind, then, let's take a look at you. Do you know who you are as an artist, as a person? Are you comfortable with letting the world discover you from the inside out? Because, as you know, revealing your true self through your performance makes magic on your audience.

What we are talking about here is how much of YOU you are willing to reveal...AND...do you hold back parts of yourself that you cannot or will not share with your audience?

We talk about connecting with the lyrics a lot around here, and then telling the story of those lyrics to your listeners, which means that if some of the lyrics are dark, then you need to be open to the communication of that darkness.

Some singers refuse to go there...to a dark place in a song, whether it be sadness, anger, despair, even hatred. I'm here to tell you that if you cannot embrace the gambit of emotions in a song, your performance of the song can be less than thrilling to an audience.

Please understand this...a nice voice, even a great voice, is only 39% of a great performance.

61% is your delivery, your connection to the words, and how well you communicate the song's meaning to an audience.

But because singing is so subjective as an art form, and so very personal, you'll hear the judges on IDOL say things like, "that song was safe...and it was boring", or "in 4 weeks of hearing and watching you, we still don't have a clue as to who you are". They react this way when the singer is reluctant to totally reveal their essence through a song. He/she will choose a song that doesn't ask for much, maybe just enough rhythm and harmonic changes to be barely interesting and fun, but emotionally vacant.

The accolades come to the singer who will use all the emotions of his/her life in a song, and leave it all out there on the stage.

Okay, so here it is, guys! You need to identify yourself as an artist, and this requires you to identify yourself as a person. You need to embrace all of who you are, forgive the stuff of you that you don't like very much, and "let it all hang out" when you perform. And really guys...quit looking for a gimmick and work on revealing the Source of who you truly are!


Monday, September 13, 2010

Q & A with a mailing list member and a great singer!!

Hi Singers!

Thought you might enjoy this exchange between me and one of our members. When I ask you for questions and comments, I mean to answer them, and this singer took me up on it.
I can do the same for all you singers out there.

Enjoy...

I have some other questions but please only answer them when you have time. I don't want to monopolize your kind availability. Feel free to take as long as you need. It's just that sometimes I have seasons where I have a lot of questions when practicing it and then I simmer down.

Here are the questions:

Well, I have some time today, so here goes:

Re: . 1) I've been singing and I'me keeping a feel for the relaxation. My shoulders, knees, legs, arms are all relaxed. So is my mouth and face. My neck isn't stiff either. They are all relaxed even on long or high notes. I feel some diaphragm use but at the same time the throat still gets slightly sore. After I'm finished the show I can get back to it within 30 minutes but my throat shouldn't feel sore at all right? My doubt continues to be how much of the diaphragm am I using. It's different showing you as opposed to doing a show.

This is where daily practicing come into play....not hours of it, but maybe 2-5 minutes every day, you need to practice the diaphragm drills to put the diaphragm on auto pilot. Takes about 30 days and after that you never need to "practice" again! You're a pro now so you should NOT be worrying about what your diaphragm is doing during a performance, and I can tell by listening to you that you normally don't. You are there to entertain and you do it exceptionally well. Practicing for a few short minutes every day for 30-45 days will get you to stop thinking about your diaphragm forever, cause you'll know that it's always working and that all your notes are being struck right in the middle where they should be struck.

Re: 2. Aren't there notes, sometimes in quick fast phrasing songs where you won't use the diaphragm so much? I mean, depending on the song it's really a combination of belly, throat and head/nasal passages right?

Actually, NO! The diaphragm should be working every moment you are singing. Mine is working even when I speak, although I don't even notice it anymore. I've been singing for 62 years, and for the last 40 of those years my diaphragm has been on automatic, so its second nature for me to be using it. I sing in the same registers that I sang in in my 20's. Tone placement in the nose, belly and throat etc, is separate from supporting the sound with the diaphragm. Using the diaphragm totally frees up everything from the chest UP and gives you the option and flexibility to PLACE your tone in any of the vibration chambers of your instrument...(Chest, throat, nose, head, etc.). But you should never let go of the diaphragm until you are totally out of air...then let go and your body takes the next breath FOR you...(like it does when you come up for air in the swimming pool).

Re: . Phrasing and softness. I've been trying the be more conscious of the diaphragm and it has had good results but some of the notes sound a bit coarse. They sound a bit like the "grunt" (now I see why they call it the "attack"). I learned over years to start a high long note softly and then bring the power up as I keep singing that note. It seems that with the diaphragm it is difficult to be conscious of phrasing and the delivery sometimes is not as pretty.

Yeah, this is a tough one. I get questions about this all the time. It's tough to sing softly without letting go of the diaphragm altogether, right? Here's what I think. When you're singing "live" to an audience, THEY DON'T CARE if its not pretty. It doesn't have to be pretty to be dynamic, dramatic, exciting, uplifting, etc. Audiences just want to have the "live" experience with an artist they admire. The performance is everything! On a recording, okay that's different. It should be more exactly correct on a recording because you are not actually there to mitigate any mistakes, see?
But listen! Practicing using the diaphragm on soft phrases will actually give you MORE control than letting go if it. When you let go, it all comes into your throat immediately and then getting it back into the belly is hard to do. Spend 1 minute or 2 every day to singing short bursts of loud and soft notes with the diaphragm as your foundation and support, and it'll become second nature in no time. Sometimes soft singing can sound kinda sleepy without the support of the diaphragm, while using it will not necessarily make the sound loud and harsh, intense or edgy, or sweet or warm, whatever you choose while still remaining soft. Listen to Vic Damone singing "A Love Affair to Remember", or Johnny Mathis singing "The 12th of Never". On the last phrase they each end on a falsetto note that is pure and simple yet sweet and warm.They could never do that without using their diaphragm. It is absolutely the key to flexibility, vocal strength and endurance.

4. I read somewhere you saying that you couldn't damage your voice by singing too high but you could damage it by singing too low. Whether you're tlking about pitch or volume I didn't get that. Coz the throat feels the strain when notes are high right?

Okay, there's a lot of misunderstanding about this one, so glad you raised this question. Let me clear that up for ya.
Mostly for females singers but also true for male singers...the human body determines how low you can sing, (by LOW meaning how far down the register you can reach comfortably and still sing with power.)
My lowest comfortable note is the Eb below Middle C. Any lower than that and I have either whisper it or "say" it cause trying to SING it with power can actually result in tearing some some very delicate tissue right between the collar bones where it feels like a U-shape. So that's why it's dangerous.
However, with CORRECT practicing using the diaphragm, I can go to High C if necessary without hurting myself and without putting any strain on my throat. Its called the "One-Voice" method and is accomplished with practice. While I can sing up to the 5th space Eb in the treble clef in my natural voice, (2 octaves from my lowest note), I still have 9 more 1/2 steps in my head voice I can sing without cracking or straining,
Male singers have 2 actual "falsettos", the first being at the very top of their full voice where they feel a strain in their throat, (which can be totally eliminated by NOT singing in the throat), and this first falsetto, or "passagio" as the classical teachers call it only consists of 2-4 half steps. Once you pass from that into the 2nd passagio or falsetto, you can sing all the way up the scale to the place only dogs can hear if you wish without hurting your voice at all. But you gotta sing correctly which again...is using the diaphragm properly.

5. Music ear. Why is it hard to know flatness when we're actually singing but we can hear it more clearly when we listen to the recording?

Well, this actually happens to me all the time. I get wrapped up in the song and the performance and every now and then I go under the pitch. So what??? It happens. When you're out there performing every night, its bound to happen, and most of the time, it makes no difference to your audience. It DOES matter in the studio however, when like I said earlier it should be more exact. So "take 2, or 3, or 33, to get it as close as you can.
(Notice I didn't use the word, "perfect" because I hate that word, and it is NOT possible to sing perfectly anyway.)
It's the striving toward perfection that gives us artists the drive to keep going, but no, we are never perfect, and therefore never satisfied. Isn't it wonderful???

6. Range. I usually have a range similar to singers like Harry Connick Jr., Nat King Cole, Dean Martin and Sinatra. However. In the nearly 1000 different recordings that I heard of Sinatra (and I'm not talking about the 40s when his voice was young) there are only about 3 instances where his ranges goes high out of my range. It's strange because other singers like Bubble, Bobby Darin, who have a higher range than me, you can clearly see this through most or many of their songs. So why does Sinatra seem to reserve his high range 99% of the time and uses it only 1%. Is that what I should be doing?

When I choose a key for a singer to sing a particular song, I try to choose the one that is centered in the "sweet spot" of the singer's range. In other words, if you have a range of 2+ octaves that you are capable of singing, there may be just a few notes somewhere within those octaves where your voice is the strongest, sweetest, and most expressive. THAT'S where you should sing most of the notes of any song. Never NEVER try to sound like anyone else but you, and sing in only the keys that express YOU best.
Sinatra smoked and drank JD for most of his adult life...and also slept very little... and you can hear it in his voice. By 40, at the top of his Capitol years, it was already losing some of the purity of his youth, but it had character that he didn't have at 20, so people, (including me) went bananas over his ability to express the lyrics. By 50, he was ready to retire because it became an effort to sing the same way he used to, and by 65, his voice was pretty much worn out. He still performed non-stop, no sleep, lotsa booze, and still had the "magic" until he could no longer hold a note longer than one beat. and was singing thru every diphthong as in "Myeeeee Wayeeeeee" rather than, Maaah-ey Waaaa-ey. Do you see this? These words have one syllable but 2 vowels sounds. using the first vowel sound opens the throat and makes the sound come out easily, effortlessly. It's only when your throat doesn't work anymore that you go instantly to the 2nd vowel sound. And that's how Frankie sang for about the last 10 years of his career.
When you sing using your throat alone you WILL wear it out, eventually. If you use the diaphragm, your voice will last forever. Ask Tony Bennett.

7. Do you think my choice of range is too high (such as in Yellow Ribbon)? Should I be singing lower keys?

As I previously mentioned, find the sweet spot of your voice and place the key of the song where most of its notes are in your sweet spot. Some of your songs DO seem high to me, but some of them sound great like on "You're Nobody". How does it FEEL to you...that's the measuring device to use when choosing a key.

8. Earnings. I need to make more money. Do you recommend I go in at the rate I want and see which clients I get or that I bend and go in lower and then raise the rates later?

I've never been very good at business decisions. Fortunately I had a piano player/partner who handled all of the financial matters, but, as a teacher, I've had to take care of those issues, so here's my take...for what it's worth.
In LA I was bringing in $75-$100 per lesson. When I moved to Texas, I had to go in at a lot less than that to establish myself and then raised my prices to the top of what THAT market could handle. I've had to do that again since moving to New Mexico.
But in all 3 markets, the price for singing gigs is pretty much the same.
Pricing yourself too low leads to exhaustion and perhaps even leaving the biz, so you gotta ask for what you know you're worth. The key is to work as many high-paying and high quality gigs as possible while sprinkling in the NH gigs that may not pay as well. In other words look for ways to work less hours but for more $$$, if that's possible.
So, don't devalue yourself, but don't put yourself out of the market altogether. Maybe check around at what the country clubs and restaurants will pay. I would also look into private functions, even house parties.
Some of my most lucrative gigs were in homes for about 25-50 guests. The atmosphere is relaxed the guests can really enjoy you...and tip you outrageously well.

Hope that helps, Doll! Just one
opinion from an
old lounge singer/vocal coach.

Thanks Chrys. This is the most exhaustive answers I ever got from any teacher on any subject. You are an awesome teacher. I'm practicing every day now and may have a couple of SHORt question in a few days. I'm very confident and boosted by your challenges and encouragements.

Love you.

Sunday, August 2, 2009

Happy August, Singers!!

Been away a long time, huh? Actually, I've been putting the blog on another site for the past 7 months or so, and if you'd like to read any of the ones you missed, they may be accessed at www.singyourlife.com/blog/.

Hope your Summer, wherever you may be is giving you an opportunity to rest and appreciate all the great things in your life. I truly believe that it’s that appreciation, that fuels the continuation of those great things.And don’t I get more and more philosophical each month???

I’ve been doing a lot of thinking about this blog…its value as entertainment as well as my own seemingly endless pontifications on the subject of singing and all its aspects.

My sister forwarded something to me a few months ago by an author named Sara Davidson. It was in a blog format, but it was actually a story in serial form and each month her blog would be a continuation of the story she was telling.

While I actually found the story a little silly, something about love and sex after the age of 50, and why even at that age, a woman cannot seem to identify a DOG when she sees one, I kinda liked the idea of the serial format.

So….I have decided to serialize my next book for you, my loyal readers. You get to read it way before it even goes to the publishers, and your comments will really help me when the time comes for final edits, so thanks in advance for that, singers.

Here’s the first installment of “Get off the Bandstand”, OR (The Rules of Behavior for the Aspiring Jazz Singer).

Introduction:
This guidebook is designed specifically for those singers who wish to pursue, or are already pursuing a career as a Jazz Singer. It doesn’t apply to any other vocal genre. And that being said, let me take a moment here to explain why that is before getting on with this book.

It is widely understood in the world of Tennis, that in order to be considered a complete player, one who is rated among the very best in the world, year after year after year, the player must be able to perform on a variety of surfaces.

In other words, the player should be as comfortable on a grass court as he or she is on a clay court, a hard court, or an indoor carpeted court. Each court demands a completely separate set of skills from the player because each surface creates different challenges.

For example, the ball will tend to bounce differently, lower, or end up in an unexpected position on grass where there are dips and even holes on the surface, than on a hard concrete court where there are none. Or, while one needs to be able to run to the ball on a grass court, he will have to perfect a sliding technique on clay to be a consistent winner.The thing is that to be a truly consistent and top rated player, one must be able to negotiate all surfaces accurately and play according to the protocols inherent in each surface.

And it’s the same for singers. Every gig is different. A singer cannot perform at a wedding the same way he/she does at a cabaret gig. And let me tell you ladies that if you try, you’ll probably never work a wedding again. Why? Because “stealing” the spotlight from the bride is a big “no no” in the wedding reception business. The guests are not at all interested in the singer’s little self-aggrandizing anecdotes. They just wanna dance!

And while you may be sitting there reading this and thinking, “Who cares about that? I will never work a wedding gig. Those are lame. I’m too good for that”, let me tell you that playing weddings can pay your rent for a year or more while you’re perfecting your scatting, building your book, or practicing your instrument.

Every Gig is Different!
If you get a call to sing back-up at a recording session, this is NOT an opportunity to try out your audition piece for American Idol. You see that, don’t you? Singing backup requires something different, something subdued, without too much vibrato that might make you stick out, because that’s the job you’ve been called to do.
How about a restaurant looking for dinner music? Is this the appropriate venue for a loud, bombastic “Come to the Cabaret”-type number, or maybe your stories of childhood and how you learned the song you’re about to sing?
When a restaurant owner says he wants dinner music, he means SOFT…elevator-style, the kind of music that people can converse over in levels no louder than a whisper.Additional factors distinguishing the differences inherent in singing jobs are not just the venue differences, but the genre differences.
There are experienced, competent singers, who work consistently, who pay their bills on their earnings from singing, who never become a famous celebrity, but who make a living AND a life doing what they love.They are as comfortable in an high class private country club with plush, elegant furnishings as they are in a bar with sawdust on the floor. They can sing in a variety of styles, like requests put forth by the customers, be it a 40’s big band tune, or a country song, or a bossa nova, or even a show tune, or a jazz standard.
These artists, and called Journeymen, (that is any experienced, competent but mostly unknown and uncelebrated performers).
There are thousands of journeymen in the music business, including guitar and keyboard players, saxophone and trumpet players, bassists, flutists, harpists, violinists, cellists, drummers, and yes, singers, all doing what they love for a living, and loving what they do every day.
These are the working professionals of the music business, and while they…[we] understand that every gig is different, and while it remains the dream of every one of them [us] to just DO OUR ACT, stand up there and express our deepest feelings, with our favorite songs, the ones that perfectly express our essence and which are arranged exquisitely, the way we want them; and our warm and witty stories that hold the audiences attention in an utter delightful magnetic clasp that only releases them when we are through, and the perfect venue where the plates and glasses make no noise when we are on the stage, and where the lighting is perfect and the sound system is set to the most attractive equalization for our voice, and one where every eye in the house is on US…Aaah YES!
While we dream all of that, we also know the reality!And that is that if we wish to work as professionals, we can almost assuredly count on being called upon to play, (sing) on different “surfaces” (venues), using a variety of strokes, (sing in a variety of genres, like Country, Jazz, Pop, Rock etc.), and need to be competent in every single one!
A working singer’s schedule for just 2 days: (sample)
  • Monday10AM – back-up singing gig at ABC Recording Studio, (no rehearsal – need to read it)
  • 12:30PM - Give a voice lesson to a student
  • 2PM – Ladies Auxiliary Luncheon and Fashion Show
  • 7PM – Happy Hour at the XYZ Bar and Grill
  • Tuesday11AM – Art Gallery Opening – (may need to emcee)
  • 2PM-4PM - Teach
  • 5PM - Cocktail Party at the GHI Hotel – Ballroom A
  • 9PM – Dance at the VFW, (may go overtime)

Naturally, every single journeyman performer aspires to greatness, fortune, and celebrity. The point here is that although that’s very true, one has to play by the rules of the game that are being played in the present moment!


TO BE CONTINUED…