When You Sing, Do You Breathe Virtually?
When You Sing, Do You Breathe Virtually? by A K Whitehead
Whatever kind of voice we have, using it to its full potential
depends very much on whether we breathe efficiently. Singing is
one of those things which virtually all of us do. But do we do
it virtually or properly?
Well, that's being rather hard. But the point is that, if we
want to sing in some kind of serious way, there are certain
principles which can be ignored only to our own detriment.
That's the case whether we prefer to sing pop or classically.
The principles involved used to be mostly associated with the
latter. But now more and more people are realising that they can
be applied with good effect to any kind of singing.
For example, do you have confidence when you open your mouth?
Can you sing phrases which are as long as you would wish? Or do
you have to loose the sense of what you are singing because of
pauses for more breath? Do you have control over the pitch and
volume of your voice? Or do you sing in ways you did not intend?
All these aspects can be improved on by developing a few
techniques for good singing i.e. for singing better than
you currently sing. Certainly, the best idea will probably be to
get a good singing teacher. But it is possible to make some
prior progress. But essential to that progress is breathing -
breathing effectively and not, as most of us tend to do,
breathing inefficiently.
And the technique of breathing effectively is really quite
simple. But it will need working at. First of all, however,
always be sure that you:
1. Care For Your Voice Your voice is, in fact, comes from
quite a delicate system of sound pproduction. The system can be
damaged, sometime irreprerably. So always take care not to push
it too far and try to do things which it has not been
educated to do.
2.Practice Ever heard that practice makes perfect?
Well, it does. Good singing does not just come. It takes
practice. Of course, no one would sing something for a public
audience without having sung through the song at least a few
times in private.
But is that where the practice should start? With the song
itself? No, it should start a good deal before that. For
example, one cannot sing without breathing - and that needs to
be practised.
But practicng once a day is far better than once a week - much
more than seven times better! That applies to virtually
anything, but certainly to this. Your lungs need to develop and
gain in doing what you want them to do.
However, breathing is not just a matter of sucking in the air.
So:
3. Breathe To Fill The Lungs In a very short time,
developing a good breathing technique will show how inefficient
your beathing used to be.
Breathing is much more than opening one's mouth and taking a
lung-full of air. In fact, just opening your mouth and trying to
take a lung-full will most likely not produce a lung-full. Most
of us take breath in such a way that we try to fill the lungs
from top downwards. That's just inefficient. The result is that
often we do not speak or sing for as long as we wanted or, even
worse, for as long as we thought we could. Even worse than that,
sometimes, we actually have air left in the lungs which we do
not use because we do not know how to use it.
Fill the lungs from bottom up. Try to breathe so that the lower
parts of your lungs expand first, right down at the bottom.
Continue to inhale and feel the lungs expand from the bottom
upwards. The first time can make one a little dizzy, but it is
only the first time.
Breathe in counting fairly slowly from one to ten. Hold the
breath for a second and then exhale over a count of twenty at
the same rate. You may not manage twenty at first, but with
practice you will. And as you practice, over a prolonged period
of time, gradually slow down the rate of counting to one second
each count. Eventually, you may be able to exhale over thirty
seconds or even more.
4. Breathe Anytime You don't need to leave your breathing
exercises at home. Take them with you whenever you are walking.
Breathe in to a given number of steps, and then try to breathe
out over twice as many. It's a harder excercise than stood at
home, but rewarding in the development of your technique and
what you can and once could not do with your breathing.
5. Breathe On Your Feet And On Your Back Standing up is
the usual position, but there can be advantages in other
breathing positions. For example. sit down in a chair with a
firm back, or on the floor with your back against the wall.
Breathe in deeply, filling from the bottom as usual. Feel your
lungs fill and expand as they push against the wall or chair.
Try doing the same laid flat on your back on the floor. After
some practice, try lifting a fairly heavy object up in your
hands as you breath, lowering it as you exhale.
6. Developing Additional Breathing Techniques There are
only a few basic principles attached to producing good singing.
The problem is that they all take considerable time and practise
to develop to anything approaching perfection. Breathing is just
one example, albeit a very important one.
Sometimes in actual singing one needs to get as much breath into
the lungs as possible within a very short space of time, perhaps
when there is a rest of only a quaver or eighth note. Sometimes
the composer has left no rest at all but a breath has still to
be taken somehow between one note and the next. In these cases
it is important to be able to get as much air into the lungs as
possible in order to get through the next phrase that has to be
sung.
To help with this, practice taking very quick intakes of air and
then exhaling over increasing lengths of time.
During the early stages of breathing development it is useful to
get some variation into the practice period. If you spend, say,
fifteen minutes on breathing, follow the general approach
outlined above. After a year or two,breathe in for the usual
count of ten so that the lungs feel full. But then try
continuing to breathe in for another ten. Then exhale in the
usual way.
Later still, follow the last paragraph, but after the second
count of ten try holding the breath for another ten, and then
exhale over at least a count of twenty but working up to thirty.
In the early stages, breathing practice can seem a bit deadly.
Try to get some variation into it. Perhaps most of all, make
regular assessments on your progress. That will help more than
anything to keep the motivation going.