u/VoiceLessons-Chicago

▲ 15 r/u_VoiceLessons-Chicago+2 crossposts

Hey singers, if you’ve been judging yourself a lot, I want you to hear this:

Did you know there are different “elite rooms” — and they are not all listening for the same thing?

A conservatory might ask: “Is the instrument healthy, trainable, disciplined, and ready for classical structure?”

The music industry might ask: “Do I believe this voice? Is there identity? Would people connect with this singer?”

Theater might ask: “Can they tell the story clearly and repeat it night after night?”

A studio producer might ask: “Can they deliver the take, stay centered, and make the emotion feel real?”

A live audience might ask: “Do I feel something when they sing?”

So when you ask, “Am I good?” maybe the better question is: “Good for which room?”
Singing is not one vague standard. Different rooms ask different things from your voice.
You don’t need to fit every room to be valid. You need to know which room you’re training for … and then become undeniable there.

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u/VoiceLessons-Chicago — 8 days ago
▲ 53 r/SingerSongwriter+1 crossposts

What’s one singing mistake you didn’t realize you were making until someone finally pointed it out?

I’m curious because so many vocal “problems” are things people don’t even notice until someone gives them the right cue.

Was it breathing? Tension? Pitch? Trying too hard? Singing too quietly? Copying other singers too much?

What was the thing that finally made singing feel easier for you?

reddit.com
u/VoiceLessons-Chicago — 11 days ago