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8 answers

Go with Scott & Ellie on this one. A lot of the other folks answering don't know what they are talking about. Try to fill up with as much air as possible, imagining that you are inflating from the bottom up. Make sure your rib cage expands in both the back and the front. Your shoulders *will* go up naturally, but not very much, so don't think about that. There's nothing really wrong with breathing through your nose, but most of the time there isn't time to do so and you can't get a clean turnaround of air from inhaling to exhaling if you inhale through your nose.

2006-06-27 13:21:20 · answer #1 · answered by Dr. Rob 3 · 1 0

I breathe through my mouth when I'm singing, but I have a deviated septum and can't breathe through my nose very well. Which ever works best for you.

2006-06-27 04:08:17 · answer #2 · answered by Pirate_Wench 5 · 0 0

TO properly breath for singing, you need to pretend to sip through a straw and fill up from the bottom of your belly near the pelvis to the top, just below your neck.

My rhetorical question is this:

Do you sip through your nose???

Of course not. the rubbish of saying that you filter impurities is based on a purely negligible amount that get filtered...

You need to tank up...the bigger the pipe, the more volume you can fill with in a shorter amount of time

2006-06-27 04:34:01 · answer #3 · answered by SCOTT & ELLIE W 3 · 0 0

Breathe through your mouth, but only right before a line. Just don't breathe with your chest, use your diaphram. In other words, make sure your stomach rises more than your chest does. Hope this helps!

2006-06-27 04:27:02 · answer #4 · answered by alyssabeth2304 3 · 0 0

easily breathe in through your nostril- respiratory through your mouth dries out your vocal membranes, that's why you get a sore throat once you've a chilly. at the same time as making a music, breathe in through your nostril and exhale through using your diaphragm muscle tissue to p.c.. out the air to make the sound. attempt to time your breaths to breaks in the music so that you do not ought to split a note through respiratory.

2016-11-15 07:58:58 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

A combination for different circumstances seems most effective. With practice, nasal breathing will increase one's capacity for long phrases. Overhead fans in our church promote more nasal breathing for our Choir performances.

2006-06-27 04:13:18 · answer #6 · answered by Crazy Guggenheim 1 · 0 0

breathe in through your nose - it has hairs to filter out impurities

2006-06-27 04:07:10 · answer #7 · answered by island3girl 6 · 0 0

I waas always taught mouth because i gets your lungs prepared and gives you a better tone

2006-06-27 04:09:10 · answer #8 · answered by gilmore-gal 2 · 0 0

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