Vocalist.org archive


From:  Paul sanchez <tragic1980@y...>
Date:  Thu Jan 16, 2003  10:29 pm
Subject:  Re: [vocalist] Advice needed



John Link <johnlink@n...> wrote:
> He explained that once you learn classical you can sing anything.

I have some doubt about that statement. In auditioning singers for my
vocal quintet I've heard plenty of singers who were trained
classically that sounded absolutely ridiculous singing anything else
because they kept doing that classical thing. To make this concrete
imagine a caricature of an opera singer doing "Happy Birthday" or
Paul McCartney's "Yesterday" or any rock song that you'd like to
perform. Can it get any worse?

I think that once you learn to sing well you can learn to apply your
skills to any type of music. Find yourself a teacher who is open to
helping you improve your singing on the material you want to improve.
Of course that teacher will have you singing scales and arpeggios and
all sorts of exercises that do not belong exclusively to any one
style. But if a teacher insists that you a learn a repertoire that
doesn't interest you, find another teacher.

John Link

That's exactly my point. I don't want to learn classical type singing because I
don't want to develop the habit of singing like that then haveing to break that
habit to sing another style. For some reason habits stick to me, i.e. I wanted
to learn to sing/scream like Chester from Linkin Park, so I did, took about a
month but I can now do it (of course not with his voice), however now anytime I
try to scream (for songs) it comes out like Chester's with that growliness and I
can't stop it argggg..... And that's pretty much why I want to find a teacher
who can teach me more with rock, or at least know rock himself, but
unfortunately I know not where to find him, sigh.



Paul



---------------------------------






  Replies Name/Email Yahoo! ID Date  
22005 Re: Advice neededJamestranquil2404 Thu  1/16/2003  
emusic.com