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damageinc

TMV World Legacy Member
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Everything posted by damageinc

  1. Sometimes you look better with age....lol. Thanks, I think that gives me a much better understanding and also lets me know that I was not using Falsetto, but head voice. Also, about the 40's comment, I think that mindset has been programmed into me. I've heard people say, enjoy your voice while you're still young when I was in my twenties. Obviously those people didn't know what they were talking about, because I havn't lost it and it seems my range has gotten higher. The other reason that probably put that idea in my head was seeing 45-60 year old vocalists from the 60's-80's loosing their abilities, but they obviously were not taking care of their voices and not practicing, that is why SNAX is an ispiration. Look at Robert Plant, I remember seeing a concert live in 93 or 94 on TV and he couldn't hit anything high; in fact he had background singers doing some of the A5 and above notes for him and that left an Impression on me back then.
  2. I'm wanting to do the same thing. No more soreness or losing my voice. No more overblowing a song. Real technique
  3. By the way Snax, you've got a great voice and it is inspiring to see that you're about 10 years older than I and still have range!
  4. thank you! maybe I am actually using head voice and not falsetto. now i just need to perfect it!
  5. So does that mean that more air would come through on falsetto?
  6. Hi folks, I am a 33 year old guy just doing this now as a hobby. I used to sing and play guitar years ago, but never concentrated on upper register. I kind of gave up on being a rock star 10 years ago, but I have thought about maybe starting a cover band for fun with some friends when my kids are a little older. Anyway...enough about me. I had a question. I have reading all over the posts on the site and have started reading Jamie Vendera's book as well as youtube videos. What I have read is that when you sing a scale up to your break, then that is the moment when you hit falsetto(above break). I having been practicing and noticed that when I push less air out, that I can run much higher than my break. My question is, when I do this with less air, is that the same a starting at falsetto, even starting at low register? Are the low notes considered falsetto too, or am I just learning how to actually control my air and upper headvoice/range? Was I just belting out too much air for all of these years? Thanks for the answers in advace and also thanks for reading such a long message.:)
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