Type of post: | Chorus news item |
Sub-type: | No sub-type |
Posted By: | Nic Cols |
Status: | Current |
Date Posted: | Thu, Apr 20 2023 |
1. Hear a Pitch. See Nov 25 detail.
2. Find Your Note. See Nov 30 Detail
3. Check Your Posture
4. Drop the Jaw! See Feb 8 Detail.
5. Form a Vowel. See Feb 15 Detail.
6. Open Your Throat. See Feb 22 Detail.
7. Open the Vocal Folds. See Mar 30 Detail.
8. Take a Singer's Breath - See the April 7 Detail.
9. Do Nothing!! - See the April 13 Detail.
10. Support and Add Air - - See the April 13 Detail.
We call it a bubble, officially a lip trill. Bring your lips together, keep them loose, pull the corners of your mouth in close, and blow like a baby - brbrbrbrbrb.
Of course, a baby can’t do it. In fact, toddlers struggle with it. It can become a fun game! Add a pitch or not, just have fun.
It’s important to bring the corners of your mouth in - the closer and tighter the better, without tightening up your lips. In barbershop, loose lips DON'T sink ships - they win medals!
Try this … Make a big, wide toothy grin. Now just bring your lips together and bubble - you can't! That's a big part of the point here. Now bring the corners of your mouth back in close - closer … closer … closer …
That’s a good bubble.
If you'd like, get out that TE Tuner app and see how well you can bubble any particular pitch, and how long you can hold it steady (we talked about that in a prior buzz).
Keep in mind the 10-steps (above) to a note keeping good posture and air support.
When you finish some bubbles, slightly vertically open your lips WITHOUT widening the width of your mouth (remember "closer, closer, closer"). With your mouth ever so slightly open, maybe a finger worth, with the sides still in tight, pick a note and sing through the vowels - a e i o u - don't widen your mouth. Keep your 10-steps in mind (see why we did them?) and be sure to raise your soft pallet through the top your head! Notice how bright your tone is and that volume is not a problem. I call it singing through your nose, but your nose is closed (no air escapes your nose - pinch it closed to be sure).
Good vowels!
Now do it for some consonants - "tee", "bee", "vee", "en" … hey, sing the alphabet song, without widening your mouth. It works, doesn’t it? Maybe it's a new warm-up exercise Carol will lead us through!!
Sing that way, all the time. You'll ring more chords.
One last note. Choral music often teaches you to open your mouth very very wide - at least three fingers between your teeth. While there are places for that in on our charts, it doesn’t generally play well with the barbershop style nor that elusive ringing chord. It allows in too much noise that prevents the ring - and it only takes a couple of people to prevent it. Great for choral, not so much for barbershop. And by the way, in barbershop, we still open the mouth wide, from the back - go review Step 4 of the 10-steps.
Singing barbershop is fun, and to do it well, it's also hard.
Go for it! Start with the baby bubble - well, after the 10-steps, and then never lose the bubble.
4. Future Notes
5. Long Range