English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

What are some good singing techniques for auditioning? Also Iv been told that for this particular show, the director looks for people that act in a certain way around other people. How do you think I should act? Also, i have a really nice song that I would like to audition with, but I'm still not confident with singing lower notes with my head voice, I was just wondering if it was a bad Idea to change from head to throat voice during the song, I change a beat after the verse and sing the chorus with my throat voice so theres no changing mid word or anything.

2007-10-10 00:34:12 · 4 answers · asked by xandersnape 2 in Entertainment & Music Music Singing

What are some good singing techniques for auditioning? Also Iv been told that for this particular show, the director looks for people that act in a certain way around other people. How do you think I should act? Also, i have a really nice song that I'd like to audition with, but I'm still not confident with singing lower notes with my head voice,so is it a bad Idea to change from head to throat voice during the song, I change a beat after the verse and sing the chorus with my throat voice so theres no changing mid word or anything.
thanks so much for the advice, but I didn't add that this isn't for a show where you play a character, this is for a music show where you have no idea what the songs are, what style or anything, they give them to you when your done with auditions. Also I love the song to bits and have been working on it, I know pretty much exactly how I should sing it, im just starting to wonder if its a bad idea to make that transition during an audition.

2007-10-10 11:26:32 · update #1

4 answers

Usually low notes are NOT sung with the head voice. It is sung in the chest voice. Singing the low notes in the chest voice is fine, as long as you don't push the chest voice. I just wanted to make that clear before I went any further. As Dannsinger said, you have to practice making the transition between the head and the chest voice in order for them to connect. I usually do this using have steps when vocalizing that break or transition in the voice. That will help you in that area. If it is a drastic change in sound, work on the break in half steps. In the mean time, try to find a song where the transition isn't so obvious.

I don't know what show you are auditioning for, but you will have to play and look the part. Directors of shows are not only looking for a good singer, but they are also looking for whether or not you can look and play the part. You have to be convincing. So whoever your character is that you are auditioning for, totally become that person. Study the character and identify the things you can do to win over the judges. Don't make excuses and don't apologize if something goes wrong. Just keep going regardless. You want to display professionalism and confidence at all times, even when you don't feel that way.

As far as your song selection, choose something from the show. If you can't sing a piece from the show you are auditioning for, sing something you are secure in. A big mistake people make in auditions, is singing songs that are popular, but don't fit their instrument. You know your instrument. Sing what you know will be a guarantee win in your voice. Don't chance doing a song you aren't fully comfortable with, because once that adrenaline starts pumping and your nerves get going, your confidence level will waiver...and so will your performance in your audition. I would choose something you know without a doubt you would sing well. Make sure you are relaxed before your audition, drink plenty of water, smile at the judges, and just have fun. If this is a pro audition, don't forget your resume and your headshot. If not, don't worry about that. Concentrate on knocking them dead. Regardless of the outcome, keep your head up and keep working on your craft. That's what you need to be successful in this industry. Good luck to you and break a leg!

2007-10-10 06:36:38 · answer #1 · answered by Ms. Chick 6 · 1 0

With all due respect; unless terminology has escaped me; throat and head aren't exactly how singing is defined. To sing depth / or projection; the diaphragm is where you have to sing from.

While I am aware that many people don't have a large range; I also know that to force it can kill an audition.

Any audition; even for a singing part; involves certain levels of ACTING; and as much as anything else you'll be judged on stage presence. You should obviously know the production like you know your own name; allowing you to actually get a sense that the audition is no different than the closing night. You must know the song as if it was your own name too; and use all the inflections that were intended in its origin. Interaction with the audience (casting people) will be similar to that case if there were others on stage with you.
The best suggestion I can make is to do what you know; and perform as if you'd been on stage all your life. Be comfortable with yourself during any audition; and prime yourself accordingly before.

Steven Wolf

2007-10-10 01:23:40 · answer #2 · answered by DIY Doc 7 · 0 0

for the reason which you have journey i'm going to spare you the : "attempt to photograph the objective audience bare", that could make you nauseous anyhow. pass to a e book shop, and get Wayne Dyer's e book: "getting contained in the hollow", and hear the 2nd or third decrease on the CD earlier you pass to mattress, for a minimum of a week earlier you audition. learn the elementary strategies to relax, and then earlier you pass into the audition, contained in the parking zone, hear to the cd or do a speedy rest technique (cd teaches you). which will launch 70% of the nerves, the different 30% you may furnish you with extra concentration. relish, it extremely is going to be elementary. I unquestionably have worked with creatives for 35 years:)

2016-10-06 10:25:06 · answer #3 · answered by kottwitz 4 · 0 0

You need to practice that transition between your head and chest (we don't call it throat) voice. If you do it right, no one will notice, so you can transition all you want.

2007-10-10 03:38:44 · answer #4 · answered by dansinger61 6 · 1 0

fedest.com, questions and answers