And breathe….

In the course of my teaching I work with a wide-ranging clientel, from those who are advanced students of singing, aspiring to a professional career in performing, to those who simply want to sing better. I have taught children as young as 7 and adults who are well into their 70’s. I have taught in classrooms and on courses and run workshops. It actually does not matter who your students are. They have one thing in common.

Breath is literally the life of their music. Finding ways to manage breath are not just as simple as putting a breath-mark in the score and breathing at that point. The way you approach that inspiration (and I use the word in more than one sense) is totally key to the success of the next phrase. If your previous phrase has finshed with your breathing out-of-control and in a panic, this affects the ability to move forward. Conversely if you are still holding breath at the end of the last phrase, just topping up can mean that you create tension in the voice and also are unable to control much of the air you have taken in.

One of my friends and colleagues over the years has been Paul Esswood, the counter-tenor. We once discussed the breath issues surrounding the alto aria ‘Esurientis’ from Bach’s Magnificat, which has an impossibly long instrumental-type phrase where breathing seems wrong. He attributed his ability to sing this phrase in one breath to preparation, at least a couple of breaths before the breath on which it is sung.

In addition to the mechanism of breathing-in, there is the emotional and communicative element of the music to add into the mix. Then, in performance, there are possible nerves, and other issues demanding our concentration. It is no wonder that almost all of us singers find difficulty with breathing at some point.

A wise singing-teacher once told me that the most control one has in singing is when one is not in control. In my humble opinion, she was right. The more you trust in the simple physical process and the emotional connections to your breath, the easier breathing, and singing becomes. If you have to ‘think’ too hard and there is a delay in the action, this causes a lack of fluency, adds inappropriate tension and control is lost.

To arrive at this simple state however, is a more difficult process! It requires one to re-train lazy abdominal muscles to support the breath-pressure one needs and also then relax to allow full breath replenishment, align posture, release tension in the throat and facial muscles and understand the massive importance that the exhalation has to the next breath and therefore the resulting sound that it is then possible to produce.

Phonation tubes can have an impact on teaching students about how to release breath consistently and in a controlled manner. Because it is possible to see that breath being released in the form of bubbles, and, at this point, sound is of a secondary concern to that release, this feedback is invaluable. Some students have remarked that they can feel what they should be doing with their diaphragms in a real way for the first time, because until you know what you are doing, it feels hit-and-miss. The back-pressure provided by blowing the bubbles into water makes this magic happen. There is no sound to be desperately concerned about ( even the most gorgeous voice sounds like a gurgling baby’s) so it helps direct attention to what is happening within the body, which means that undesirable shoulder movements, chest-caving, protruding heads and other destructive tensions are clearer and therefore more easily rectified.

Richard – phonation tube, the magical warm-up!

If, like me, you often open a bottle of red wine, pour and drink, you may know that a wine aerator really improves the taste of the wine. As you pour the wine through the specially designed “funnel” the wine draws air down through two long holes in the funnel and aerates it. I have carried out many blind tastings with friends and every time they can distinguish between the wine straight from the bottle and the aerated wine.

Now, of course, you could be patient, uncork the wine in good time and allow it to breath naturally. Same result, wine that tastes better after breathing.

There is, however, no way to uncork the human voice. Even hours spent chattering to friends and family will not warm-up your singing voice. You have to start gently and give it time to warm-up. This is where the magic phonation tube apparatus comes in. Blowing bubbles through a piece of plastic tube into a bottle (with the right depth of water) seems to “smooth” the voice quality. Although you still need to warm up the singing voice, the process is helped EVERY TIME, by using the phonation tube technique. So simple but so effective and all you need to carry with you is the tube. A bottle and liquid can be found anywhere.

So next time I am travelling without my wine aerator, and need to enjoy a glass of red wine, perhaps I will remember to carry my phonation tubing with me, and see if blowing bubbles into the wine will speed up the aeration process!

Seriously, a phonation tube helps every time with the warm-up process. What I need to test next is whether it will help the sound quality AFTER my singing voice is warmed up, and also (and I have no idea how to achieve this) whether the tube improves not just voice quality in the warm-up process but long-term voice quality. Probably need some help from an interested university in researching this one. In return I can demonstrate the benefits of a wine aerator!

Richard

Thoughts on the phonaton tube from a practical perspective

Cathy Robinson

Hi I’m Cathy Robinson. I am a singer and singing teacher and I work with students of all ages and abilities including children, mature students and undergraduate performing arts students at Canterbury Christ Church University. When using the phonation tube, I generally start by getting students to just create bubbles by blowing into the tube the same way you might see a child do so with a straw and drink. Then I ask them to create the same bubbles but vocalising and we do some simple exercises with and then without the tube. My students notice an immediate difference in the way their voices feel and sound, just as I did when first using the tube. Often individuals are surprised, describing their voices as more relaxed and suggesting that the sound is easier to make. I have found this works particularly well with students who experience tension and strain especially on high notes. The tube has now become a must have for me when teaching and in my own singing practice!