by admin of http://www.myvoiceexercises.com/
Hy Guys, for you that interesting about singing and want to learn the techniques, this one maybe can help you. Check this one out!
Humming as a Voice Warm Up Exercise
Try saying the word “hmmmm?” This is called humming, and is one of the most basic exercises for vocal warm up.
- Say the word “hmm?” You should allow the pitch to shift upwards as you hum.
As your pitch moves higher, you should feel a buzzing sensation in your nose. This sensation may progress towards your eyes and move upwards into your head. The humming sound will resonate inside your head, resonating off the space inside your skill to amplify the voiced pitches.
- Repeat the voice warm up by saying “hmmm?” This time allow the pitch to shift downwards. This should be similar to the noise made when you are contemplative.
Feel the buzzing sensation move downwards into the chest area.
- Hum the first three notes of the basic scale. Hum do re mi, then return to mi do
- Repeat this exercise 3 times
Do Rei Mi Rei Do
- Repeat the do rei mi exercise, but shift up to the next pitch. Singing employs a variety of pitch ranges, so you want to warm up your vocal chords to all of the ranges.
- Repeat this exercise at each pitch 3 times
The Lip Trill Voice Warm Up Exercise
Pretend that you are underwater. Imagine blowing air out from your lips, feeling the vibrating sensation of your lips as air exits from your lungs.
Perform this same motion, only this time you are outside the water. Relax your lips as you release air from your mouth. Your diaphragm muscles should control the release of air. It sometimes help to place one hand against either side of jaw to focus the passage of air on vibrating the lips.
Special note: avoid blowing air from your mouth using your lip muscles. Your lips should be completely relaxed and air should be moved through the mouth using your diaphragm.
This video will guide you about what a lip trill should sound like.
Once you are able to perform the lip trill successfully, practice trilling a single note.
- First hum the note, in order to properly benchmark against a quality sound