Set your metronome at 60 BPM. Play the C major scale in quarter notes for one octave, eighth notes for two octaves, and if your instrument will allow it, play triplets for three octaves. Pianists can continue to sixteenth notes for four octaves. Still with your metronome set at 60, play...
She was a child prodigy whose brilliance was clear from the start. But the struggles she endured helped make her the Queen of Soul.
They both learned to play harmonica around age 5 and now also sing, play guitar, bass, drums, and keyboards. The key to getting good is consistency. They still play & practice every day and haven't missed a day in many, many years. ...
Using the methods that he created and perfected in his 25+ year singing career, Jaime turned his two-octave range into six octaves with 120 decibels of raw vocal power. And now, he's showing some of the most famous rock & metal vocalists on the planet how they, too, can strengthen ...
For instance, if you’ve pitch shifted a take of your pad vocal, performed with a syllable like “ahh”, “mmm” or “ooh” an octave below, using another take to layer it a couple octaves higher can help highlight the overtones. ...
Storace claims he nailed the eventual single "Screaming in the Night" on the very first take. "I was at my peak then, you know?" he explained toVWMusic. "I could sing circles [around] my highest note, and my highest notes – I was hitting four octaves on my best day." ...
Storace claims he nailed the eventual single "Screaming in the Night" on the very first take. "I was at my peak then, you know?" he explained toVWMusic. "I could sing circles [around] my highest note, and my highest notes – I was hitting four octaves on my best day." ...
you already know you can do a ton of cool things. One of the cooler things you can do is changing a guy's voice to sound like a woman's. This is done with pitch control, or autotune, and will like you modify the voice by a number of octaves. I this video, rock band 30 second...
Some melodies occupy a very large range (2 octaves and up) while others have a much smaller range (half an octave). The range is important to consider when writing a good melody as a wide range will make it more difficult to hum, whistle, and remember – whereas a narrow range will ...
has as wide a vocal range as the vocalists whom they are targeting. For example, while a non-performing songwriter might have a vocal range of an octave-and-a-third, a hit vocalist is likely to be able to sing an octave-and-a-half, and in some cases, two full octaves, or even ...