head register การใช้
- Men have a falsetto register, which lies above the head register.
- The chest register was the lowest of the three and the head register the highest, with the passaggio in between.
- She generally sang in her chest register but could use her head register and sing in a very controlled tone.
- She stressed the " unmusicalness " of the seventh octave, as well as the avoidance of the head register in men.
- The continuing, tremulous nodding of her head registers as a direct consequence of having worked too hard and too long to be a reassuring wife.
- Likewise, for a singer with an underdeveloped head register, after a period of time focusing on the head voice, the belt may be found to have improved.
- In the head register ( which is above the chest register ), some of the bottom end leaves the voice, but it's still, according to Martin, a voice capable of much power.
- Chilanga Banda is a hip-hop piece in Mexican slang ( featuring the sound " ch " ), and Ojal?Que Llueva Caf?is marked by fast-paced fiddle and rapid switching from chest register to head register-reminiscent, in fact, of yodeling.
- On the basis of these " Ring " performances in London, the influential critic Herman Klein described her voice as being a light dramatic soprano, similar to Christine Nilsson's, with a very clear head register and elegant phrasing and diction.
- According to Clippinger there is every reason to believe that the change in the mechanism for male voices into head register is the same as that which occurs in the female voice as it goes into the middle register at the same pitches.
- Belt technique requires muscle coordination not readily used in classically trained singers as the thyroarytenoid muscle is dominant ( as opposed to head register singing where the cricothyroid muscle is dominant ), which may be why some opera singers find learning to belt challenging.
- In particular, the use of the terms " chest register " and " head register " have become controversial since vocal registration is more commonly seen today as a product of laryngeal function that is unrelated to the physiology of the chest, lungs, and head.
- *" For example, a singer may sing a particular note in the head register softly, but upon trying to increase the volume and pull the note into the chest register "'pulling'a note into chest from head is actually technically impossible in 99 % of the vocal range.