Learn how to breathe properly from 25 year Veteran Vocal Coach, Jonathan Morgan Jenkins. Please Subscribe to and share this site with your friends and contacts for more FREE Vocal Instruction videos in the future. Sign up at his web site and receive 225.00 in FREE GIFTS! www.vocaltrainingwarrior.com Subscribe to my Free Blog vocaltrainingwarrior.blogspot.com
great lesson you r the best
WOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Your hyperventalation description is all wrong. You hyperventalate when your body takes in more Oxygen than is needed. Here’s why: You pant, and that involves mainly the upper third of your lungs. The majority of your alveoli that exchanges gasses between the lungs and the blood on the top part of your lungs. So breathing in shallow has the same effect on your blood.
For Singing, you need as much air as possible, so breathing from the diaphram allows for the pressure strength.
he’s a little incorrect in his explanation about 3:00 – the lungs do not go down in any way – they expand outward with your ribcage. His point is correct – the details are fuzzy.
The BEST way to breathe low and wide to the waist is to sit with your elbows on your knees and breath in. Only your stomach will move. Sitting like this locks out the shoulders.
Also try visualizing in your head that you’re breathing in with your knees. When you exhale you should feel like a deflating balloon
hmm, I could have sworn I wrote vocal warrior above.
Try re-watching 2:30 – 3.15 again.
Your stomach doesn’t hold air! What happens when your stomach extends is your diaphragm (a muscle underneath your lungs) is dropping and your lung capacity gets larger.
When using this technique (a familiar one, though only when I’m singing – not just normally) I also feel a rise in my chest, although my shoulders don’t move. (Like my chest is moving out as well as my stomach). Is this right??
Really? Wow.
I’m an alto (range from mid bass clef to F, top line of the treble stave) but I do have a break in my voice (Don’t ask me why, I am a girl, tell me voice that!). When needing to sing low or melodic soprano (and so in the top of my range) I get really dizzy sometimes. I thought this was because I wasn’t breathing properly…
Course it is, with careful work and practice. Good luck.
he’s a VOCAL warrior, not a physical warrior.
0:10
Oh! Hi!
hahaha
actually it has more to do with our voice bouncing around in our head before it leaves the mouth added with what comes out of the mouth is what we hear our voices to be.
stick your fingers in your ears and talk – that bassy sound is added to the sound we hear – other people don’t hear that added bass – thats why our voice sound thinner on tape.
People don’t hear that added low end we hear from the voice resonating in our heads and throat – the only hear what comes out our mouth.
he doesn’t look much like a vocal “warrior” to me.
that helped.
wow wtf….
can you taste your own ass?
jeez was that really necssesary??
what are you talking about??????
Thats cause you have no idea how do sing, and you not hitting any notes or placing your air correctly. Faggot.
if you sound good when you sing and sound like crap when you record you prolly are tone deff…or your ears suck at hearing lol ha
the singing success videos are better
haha that happens to me…when i sing, i sound pretty great to myself, but when i record it, it sounds sooo terrible
yeah it’s because the way the sound travels through and how we hear, we don’t hear the way we actually sound til we record ourself and play it back, i just found this out through my Audio class this past quarter.
its the same for screaming
hahaha yeah