Vocal
Production Lesson 1
Posture: The Basis For All Good Singing
Is
(This series was previously published in The Pitch Pipe
during the mid-90s. The series was so popular during its first run
we have decided to update and bring it back for an encore.)
By Betty Clipman, international
board of directors
Every
Sweet Adeline loves to sing. Whatever we derive from our membership,
it is much more rewarding for us when we sing well. Thus, we have
great drive throughout our organization to do so. The better each
member sings, the better the quartet or chorus sounds and the more
rewarding the experience for every member.
Vocal
skills are the key ingredients for all performing groups, and individual
vocal lessons are the ideal way to improve; however, many of us
don’t have the time or money for individual vocal instruction.
Even so, there is a way to become a better singer: do-it-yourself
vocal production lessons!
With this article, we begin
a journey that will continue over the next several issues of The
Pitch Pipe. The goal of the series is to present information
in such a way that each reader will be able to learn and practice
improved vocal production techniques, even if it is not possible
to take professional vocal lessons. So let’s begin …
Posture is the basis of all
good singing. When you study a musical instrument, you are first
taught to hold it correctly so that you have the ability to play
it properly. The human voice is the most versatile and flexible
of musical instruments. Since we sing with our whole body, it is
important, and the basis of all good singing, to learn how to hold
the body properly.
The ultimate goal in singing
is a freely produced, rich, open and resonated sound. The vocal
apparatus must be relaxed. The way the body is held –its posture–
has a major impact on whether the vocal mechanism can remain relaxed
and free.
Common posture problems:
1. Locking the knees –
When the knees are locked, the body is off balance. This causes
body tension, which creates a tense singer. Be sure to put the weight
forward on the balls of the feet and keep the tail bone tucked under
to help avoid inadvertent locking of the knees.
2. Swayback – Sometimes
a singer tries to attain a lifted chest by pulling the shoulders
back (and consequently tensing them) instead of using the muscles
around the rib cage to lift the ribs out of the waistline. The intercostal
muscles surrounding the ribcage are the muscles that should be used
to lift the ribs and the sternum. When the shoulders are pulled
back instead of the sternum being lifted high, and the buttocks
are not tucked under but are thrust backward, swayback posture is
the result. In this tense, unbalanced position, good vocal production
is not possible.
3. Chest droop – As a
musical phrase is sung and air is exhaled, it is easy to allow the
chest to cave in and the rib cage to drop back into the waistline.
At the end of the phrase, if this occurs, the singer has lost the
height of the sternum. As you sing a phrase, consciously retain
the height of the sternum and resist the collapse of the rib cage.
You might have other posture
problems as well as these three common ones. To monitor your posture,
look in a full-length mirror and compare your body alignment to
the illustration here and the example photograph. Check each of
the ten elements listed beside the illustration (feet, weight, knees,
buttocks, etc.).
More information about proper
singing posture is available from many sources; an excellent one
is http://www.dummies.com/WileyCDA/DummiesArticle/id-2013%2Csubcat-ARTS.html,
another one is How to Train Singers, a book and audiotape package
by Larra Browning Henderson. Both sources include many good exercises
as well as vocal production theory. The book package is available
through international sales.
If all singers in a chorus will practice and attain good posture,
it will make a noticeable difference in the overall sound of the
group. So I challenge you to master correct singing posture. When
you do, you will notice a significant improvement in the quality
of your voice. And you will be prepared to begin work on the next
key ingredient of vocal production: breathing. We will take up that
subject in the next issue of The Pitch Pipe.
Sample Exercise
Since posture is a key ingredient
and the basis for all good singing, it is important for every singer
to practice often enough and long enough to make correct posture
a habit. Even after you consider yourself an expert, it is vital
to continue to monitor your posture, because it is extremely easy
to lapse into incorrect body alignment. Maintaining correct posture
even for the length of one song requires considerable muscle strength
and control. Regular practice sessions help build strength and endurance
as well as reinforcing the techniques themselves.
Here is a simple exercise that will help you develop strength and
endurance in the intercostals muscles, so that they are more able
to hold the rib cage high and wide more efficiently and for longer
periods of time:
* Take in a full breath through
the nose, inhaling as much air as possible but without creating
any tension in the chest or shoulder area. Expand the rib cage to
its capacity.
* Now exhale, using a hissing sound like air escaping from a tire,
as you count slowly from one to eight. Resist the inclination to
allow the rib cage to collapse while exhaling; use the intercostal
muscles to keep the rib cage high and wide.
* Continue to perform the exercise on a daily basis, gradually building
up your exhalation time to 16 counts while maintaining the position
of a high, wide, open rib cage.
* Note that the danger in this exercise is tension and overexertion.
It is easy to become tense about not allowing the rib cage to collapse.
Remain conscious of keeping free of tension, constriction and tightness
in the shoulder and chest areas.
Proper singing posture, from the toes up:
* One foot slightly in front of the other, feet comfortably apart
for good balance
* Weight forward on the balls of the feet, heels on floor
* Knees relaxed and flexible
* Buttocks tucked under
* Chest (sternum) lifted high and spread wide
* A feeling of the ribs being lifted up out of the waistline
* Shoulders relaxed, as if hanging on a coat hanger
* Neck relaxed, head able to move freely
* Head remains level
* Chin parallel to the floor, neither lifted nor lowered
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