RE: [Harp-L] RE: OT: learning to sing



Bravo. I can think of many people who cannot sing yet became rich and famous
by singing - Neil Young, Bob Dylan, Cindy Lauper, Ozzie...  :^)

Bill Hines
Hershey, PA

-----Original Message-----
From: harp-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx [mailto:harp-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf
Of Nicolas Fouquet
Sent: Monday, December 06, 2004 8:42 PM
To: R Kraft; harp-l@xxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [Harp-L] RE: OT: learning to sing


Just because you're a "bad" singer, doesn't mean you can't sing. Absolutely
true!!! I am a very bad singer, and unfortunaltely for my family, I can
sing!! Usually, I almost manage to sing a whole song before they manage to
put a pink pill into my mouth. Then, after, I do not remember what is going
on and what happened.

I just remember that I was singing and suddenly, fans jumped on me, grabbed
me, they love me so much.

So, you see, I may  not  be a good singer, but that's just a matter of point
of view and how you see the situation. ;D

Seriousely, to not unable to sing you have to be mute, and even then, I am
not sure that mute people can not sing with their throat. Even deaf people
can sing (see what Beethoven has done while he was deaf)

Are you Deaf? Are you Mute? NO! So you can sing. If you are determinated you
will be a singer. If you have the motivation being a singer, so do it.

You play hamronica, so you manage to master your air column and your
breathing. Then, you're one step ahead many folks looking ofr singing. So,
if you want it, go it boy, go! go! go!

 

Froggy

R Kraft <hoosierdads@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Hi Roy,

Just because you're a "bad" singer, doesn't mean you can't sing. I'll only
address pitch here - a vocal coach can help you with voice quality, but if
you get pitch together you'll probably feel much better. I've never met a
person who was tone-deaf. If you can tell the difference between a statement
and a question you can hear small pitch differences.

I've had a friend and a guitar student that had trouble hearing pitch. Here
are quick stories on how they got better:

Friend, ~55 years old, lifetime radio DJ and oldies program director. His
kids made fun of his singing (and he knows the words to thousands of songs).
We spend 10 minutes matching pitch (I would sing a pitch, he would match),
then he picked a phrase from a song that was easily in his range and we
worked on that, note-for-note. When he went home his kids were amazed that
he could stay on pitch. His problem was that he was hearing the song in his
head without hearing his voice. I'm guessing that this could be what you're
doing. Any person who you feel can sing a tune can help you listen and
correct. 

My guitar student (15 years old) actually sang every note a major 3rd above
the note he wanted to sing (what he heard in his head). He would play the
melody and then sing it completely differently - it made for some pretty
cool harmonies. I would play a note on the keyboard and he would copy it -
the first few times it took maybe 30 seconds for him to adjust his pitch.
Within about 15 minutes he could scoop to the note within one second. It
took him a few weeks of working on it with his girlfriend to get it
together. As with above, anyone who you trust to hear pitch can help you.

Remember, if you're singing a song you get to pick the key to make it best
fit your range.

Good luck and have fun learning!

Ned
_______________________________________________
Harp-L is sponsored by SPAH, http://www.spah.org Harp-L@xxxxxxxxxx
http://harp-l.org/mailman/listinfo/harp-l


		
---------------------------------
 Découvrez le nouveau Yahoo! Mail : 250 Mo d'espace de stockage pour vos
mails ! Créez votre Yahoo! Mail

  Avec Yahoo! faites un don et soutenez le Téléthon !
_______________________________________________
Harp-L is sponsored by SPAH, http://www.spah.org Harp-L@xxxxxxxxxx
http://harp-l.org/mailman/listinfo/harp-l






This archive was generated by a fusion of Pipermail 0.09 (Mailman edition) and MHonArc 2.6.8.