Double check your terminology. Modal refers to the key/ mode a piece is performed in, major, minor, mixolidian etc
Chest voice is the "heavy" part of the low/middle of your singing voice.
"Head" voice is the light part of your singing voice as you move into your middle/upper range and really is the prefered lighter sound when singing in choir. There are also your falsetto and whistle which are in the extreem of your high registers when singing.
choir director
hey, again! I just looked up "modal voice" out of curiosity- that is the scientific term for "phonation" or the sound we make when we say a vowel and hold it like ahhhhhhhh; it is a term, and we definately sing on the vowel, but it has little or no connection to the musical term chest voice. best of luck
2007-09-19 10:44:13
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answer #1
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answered by Smirks :0} 4
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lovable voice! besides back to subject count number ^.^; i think of which you're employing your chest voice many of the time.(witch is the main wholesome to apply) yet once you get to the extreme notes, you visit a head voice. dont difficulty that's undemanding and between the justifications why people prepare making a song. to get the transition infrequently considerable. the clarification why i will tell is probably because of the fact I rather have a stable ear. a chest voice sounds greater deep and husky, on a similar time as a head voice would not.
2016-10-09 11:48:18
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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Do you mean a 'nasal' voice and a chest voice? (I don't know what a 'modal' voice is)
In a 'chest voice' the air is pushed up with your diaphragm and chest muscles and the air flows out your mouth. In a 'nasal' voice the sound is more forcefully shaped by your larynx and less flow through your mouth and the sound is more in your nasal cavities.
A chest voice sounds more operatic, a nasal voice sounds more like Bob Dylan.
2007-09-19 09:30:31
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answer #3
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answered by megalomaniac 7
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