A blog for extreme vocalists. Articles, advice, audio clips and answers about extreme vocal techniques for live performance and recording and how best not to abuse your throat.
Is what I would
say if this were a Dungeons and Dragons session, but it’s not. I’m only half
sad about this. But away from my crippling socially unacceptable pass-times and
onto vocal technique analysis! This blog is going to be a brief, bullet point run
through of a topic everyone into metal has an opinion on regardless of whether
they’re a vocalist or not: Inhales and Exhales, and why one of the two is
better than the other. I’ll breakdown each technique as best I can, then list
the advantages and disadvantages and give you some examples of vocalists who
use them.
Before I begin, I’d like to point out that I have a LOT more
experience with exhales, given my own musical taste and the resulting vocal
techniques. This will most likely be reflected in my analyses below.
WARNING: Doing inhales puts a large amount of pressure on
your vocal chords, because you’re breathing in a shit ton of air, and this can
damage your throat (you can begin to develop vocal fold nodules). I take no
responsibility for you messing up your throat. If you want to do inhales-
that’s all well and good- but be careful, and be prepared to live with the
consequences. Also, this article assumes good technique in both inhales and exhales
and wasn’t written for what I consider ‘bad’ technique, so if you disagree with
me on points of technique some of this will be irrelevant to you. Also, I’ve
ignored people’s own individual ranges (e.g. soprano, tenor etc) for the
purposes of this article.
Inhales
In basic terms, an
‘inhale’ is when you draw air into your throat and close your vocal chords
together to create sound. You can create a whole range of sounds from
really low through to very high (which is where the term ‘pig squealing’
came from).
They’re easier to get good
at quickly, as all you have to do is draw air into your throat and
experiment with creating the noise you want to get. Although, it can take
a while and a lot of innovation to get some noises (for example the more
nasal pig squeal is a bitch to nail because, as the name implies, you have
to use your throat!).
Volume wise, they tend to
be a lot less loud than a comparable exhaled vocal, but not so much
they’re an unfeasible option during a performance. Though it would be imprudent
of me to not point out that most vocalists who use inhales cup the
microphone in order to make up the difference in volume.
The ‘bree’ sound that is
characteristic of the vocal style (both high and low pitched sounds) is
usually created by making a sideways Y-shape with your mouth. While the
mouth shaping is really integral to the style it makes it really hard to
accurately say words, and while that isn’t of paramount importance all the
time, if you’re like me and like saying things correctly then it poses a
slight problem.
Most vocalists who use
inhales do so while their body is arched over and their back is bent. This
is possible because they’re drawing air into their throats and they don’t
need to maintain a ‘pillar’ of air flow into their lungs, but it doesn’t
really help or hinder anything technique-wise it’s just a style thing.
No real mid-range: given
how hard it can be to articulate words, combined with the whole ‘bree’
precedent, it’s really uncommon for a vocalist to use mid-range inhales.
This results in there being no dynamic range within the genre- it’s
basically entirely super low brees, and ear piercingly high inhaled
shrieks.
Advantages: quick to
learn, massive potential range.
Disadvantages: Puts a lot
of pressure on your throat, associated prejudice, low volume, can be hard
to say words and articulate them properly,
Famous practitioners
include Annotations of An Autopsy, Job For A Cowboy, Mars Needs
Cheerleaders, Twitch of the Death Nerve, Gutted With Broken Glass. (N.B.
not all of these bands use inhales all the time).
Exhales
An ‘exhale’ is when you
air from your diaphragm up through your chest, through your throat and out
of your mouth (that isn’t technically biologically accurate, but thinking
about it this way helps develop good technique). This can be any kind of
vocal from a death growl, thrash vocals, punk, screaming or even clean
singing would technically be considered an exhale.
You can create a massive
range of sounds using exhales, as you can utilise your entire vocal range
within whichever style you’re performing e.g. you can death growl really
low, low, mid-low, middle, mid high, high and very high using exactly the
same technique.
In terms of volume, it’s
possible to perform exhales basically as loud or as quiet as your normal
voice can go. Though, this is dependant on both the individual’s ability
to project and the type of vocal.
Most vocalists perform
while stood up straight and sing more or less straight into the microphone,
as breathing is fairly important when performing exhales.
Advantages: Less risk of throat
damage, more sounds in the mid range, louder and easier to project.
Disadvantages: Takes
greater time to learn, can be harder to switch between vocal extremes
Famous practitioners: Cannibal
Corpse, At The Gates, Black Dahlia Murder, Arch Enemy.. (and most Metal
vocalists)
Way of making sure you’re exhaling
There is one really easy way to make sure you’re exhaling,
or inhaling if you’re trying to do that. Put the palm of your hand in front of
your mouth, and growl. You should be able to feel warm air being expelled onto
your palm. If this is happening, then you’re exhaling. Inhaling causes the air
in front of your mouth to be sucked in, so you wouldn’t feel anything, apart
from potentially a slight cold sensation.
Conclusion
In conclusion, I much prefer using exhales and think they
sound far better and are less risky to use than inhales, but this is just my
opinion. This post kinda turned into a more in depth analysis of inhales than I had intended, but it's hard to cover all of the different techniques and styles one can use while exhaling and compare them with the two or three that are most commonly used by inhaling vocalists. So this article has turned out a lot more biased than I had intended, but
yeah. Feel free to ignore it.
P.s. I couldn’t be
assed doing a separate blog post to recommend this site, but it’s awesome. Only
really deals with clean singing but a lot of what’s on there can be applied to
extreme vocals with a little experimentation.
[edit 4/7/12 : Completely forgot to also point out that you can get more or less any sound you can get by inhaling also by exhaling. All it takes is a little ingenuity and practice]
Hey,
Apologies! I've been massively behind with my posts. Which is awful given that it's only my second week of doing this blog. But yeah! I do realise this. It's been due to a combination of being ill, busy and demotivated the last couple of days. The article on Inhales Vs Exhales is in progress (it's about half written) and I'll get around to it sometime in the next couple of days. Thereafter the blog will probably be either weekly or fortnightly depending on how busy my life is at the time. But yeah, if there are any avid readers out there- don't despair. It'll get done eventually.
Ladies and Gentlemen of the internet, Today I’m going to deal with, and in some cases dispel, the 7 biggest lies, myths and misconceptions about metal vocals and how they’ll affect you as a vocalist. It’ll be a relatively short post, but one that it’s essential to understand the lessons of. Most of this is my opinion and the result of my experience, so it is wholly biased and subjective, so take it as you will. 1) The first and most common comment you will hear, everywhere and unrelentingly is that “it’s just noise”. This can be a massive disadvantage as it will mean that the majority of people (yes- even musicians and music fans) won’t actively be listening to what you’re singing, and to a point, don’t really care. As long as there is something on top of the music most people are happy. So, my advice would be don’t expect too much respect from the majority of people. 2) It’s also a massive myth that most people actively listen to vocals. Yes, they listen to the general tone for about ten seconds to get an idea, but beside that they don’t actually pay any attention in my experience. People care far more about what you’re doing on stage, your persona and what you’re wearing. It’s sad, and shallow but true. And the first lesson I ever learned about being a vocalist. If you look right, appear confident and get the basic jist right, often your own band won’t notice if you’re improvising or lost, let alone audience members. So don’t panic if you’re not totally pitch perfect or you forget a line here or there.
3) There are a million different vocal techniques, and everyone has a different voice. When you add this to the millions of different subgenres that exist at the moment, it basically means that in some way, whatever noise you can make is appropriate to some kind of music, and consequently, can’t be considered wholly bad or wrong. And while every genre has its own trademark expected sound, there is always someone somewhere that veers from tradition and uses a different tone. Most of these people tend to do so because they can’t do anything else. There is a massive amount of diversity out there, and no matter how bad you think you are, there’ll always be someone somewhere worse who everyone respects and thinks is awesome. 4) This one is simple- volume is not the same as tone or technique, and it never will be. Never sacrifice tone for volume. It’s what microphones and PA’s were built for. 5) Another common misconception is that there is no melodicism or tonality. This in itself is just wrong. If one stops to consider it, even just doing the same scream on two different days will never sound exactly the same, so the idea in itself is totally moot given the myriad of different things you can do with your throat to create different kinds of highs and lows or it being a fairly simple matter to pitch growls in scales. 6) If you trawl through youtube videos, you’ll eventually stumble across what is referred to as “cupping the mic” and how it’s a massive sin. The reason people do cup the microphone with their hands is to increase the volume of the growl that reaches the microphone, much like when children make a cone out of cardboard and use it as an acoustic loudspeaker. I’m fairly outspoken on the whole issue really (as if you need to cup the mic, you still have a lot of practicing to do) but many prominent extreme vocalists do cup the mic all the time, and have massive amounts of fans and imitators, so don’t rule it out if you’re struggling or you just want to get going- but remember: people will judge you. Well, anyone paying attention anyway. 7) Lastly, there’s the idea that drinking and smoking somehow make your voice better in a permanent way. They don’t, in fact, given their proven biological effect on the vocal chords, they’re both really detrimental to vocal performance. They do affect your voice, and can make it easier to get certain tones, but don’t think that they’re a magical solution to hitting that new low you’ve been trying to get for months. On the other hand, they’re not going to instantly kill your throat or anything drastic, and their effect happens over a long period. The best advice I can give is if you must do it, do it in moderation.
Today’s post is
centred around another aspect of vocal performance that I think everyone should
consider in at least a little depth: breathing. And yes, I know, everybody does
it every day and they’re perfectly good at it. But breathing for vocal
performance is a very different kind of animal, because often your normal
breathing won’t accommodate the kind of vocals you’re trying to pull off or you’ll
have about a second to breathe before holding out a twenty second long scream,
so you really have to be in control of your throat and lungs and know song
structures down to a tee. Besides this there are many advantages to being in
control in terms of your breathing. Once you’re totally at home with your
lungs, you can be a lot more precise and interesting with vocal patterns and do
stuff that other people wouldn’t be able to pull off, completely ignoring the
potential for ego massaging and stupidly long screams that will boggle
audiences’ minds.
I’d just like to take a moment to emphasise that this
article actually has very little to do directly with extreme vocals, but a LOT
to do with them in terms of indirect improvement, so like, you can feel free to
ignore this at your own leisure, but if you take a lesson or two from it and
incorporate an exercise from it into your practice routine or even just get a
better idea of how breathing works and consider it in terms of your performance
it will improve your vocal abilities no end. There are countless sources of
breathing techniques to be found online via a quick google search (most of
which are based around the same core techniques), but I’ve never bothered with
them at any length as I already know the basics of what I need to, and the
exercises I’ve either stolen or worked out over the years work for me. If you’re
ever feeling fruity, or want to particularly focus on improving your breathing
technique feel free to wade through the vast amounts on breathing exercises you
can find on the internet. This post will cover the basics of breathing as I understand
them and lay out some exercises I myself do in conjunction with improving my
own abilities.
What follows is a rudimentary run through of what happens
when you breathe in and out, as best I can explain it and you need to
understand it given the context. It may not be the most interesting thing in
the world, but it’s worth considering if you’re going to take the breathing
exercises seriously. As you breathe in, your diaphragm (an elastic muscle
stretched across the bottom of your ribcage) contracts- drawing the air around
the front of your mouth down through your throat and trachea into your lungs.
As the air goes into the lungs, so that they can absorb the oxygen out of the
air, the organs increase in size and volume because of the air they are being
forced to contain. This, in turn, forces the intercostal muscles and the
ribcage to be pushed outwards, expanding the overall size of your chest cavity.
Then, once your lungs have absorbed the oxygen or you force the air out in a
different way, the chest cavity shrinks in size, the diaphragm relaxes and the
air in your lungs is expelled as they shrink in size.
The exercises I am about to detail focus on changing the way
your automatic breathing works, as you breathe a lot differently when you’re
not thinking about it directly and focusing on other tasks (like, for example
headbanging or interacting with the crowd). This is because conscious and
unconscious breathing are controlled by different areas of the brain and are
basically unrelated, so as soon as you start thinking about what you’re doing,
you’re basically using an entirely separate part of your brain. I’m still working on changing my unconscious
breathing to work wholly correctly during a gig situation, and I’ve been
working at it for a few years, so don’t expect it to come massively easily or
immediately. Though, the benefits are noticeable within a fairly short time
frame if you practice these exercises regularly.
What follows are the three breathing exercises that I use on
a regular basis to either expand my lung capacity, make breathing during songs
come to me easier on an unconscious level or just focus a little more on
building up on my torso’s collective muscle memory.
The metronome exercise
This exercise requires the use of an online metronome, it’s
fairly easy to find one online, and any old one will do as long as the metronome
is in time. The exercise itself consists of taking in a breath through your
nose exclusively for a certain number of beats, holding your breath for a
certain number of beats, then expelling air over a prolonged period for a
certain amount of beats.
When I do this exercise it usually goes in a 1:1:2 ratio,
though if you’re feeling confident go for 1:1:4. So an average exercise for me
nowadays is take breathe in through your nose (and only your nose) for 3 or 4
beats (I’m not usually that precise with intake, because I’m never precise
during a live situation), hold it for 6 beats and expel an actual scream for 10
or 12 beats. This doesn’t actually push me at all- but it’s a good thing to do
regularly, as doing it regularly will expand your lung capacity and enable you
to do longer screams and increase the amount of control you have over your
breathing. I mean hell, nowadays I can belt a scream for somewhere between 30
and 50 seconds depending on how much I’ve been drinking that particular week.
This is all down to practice and endurance, so the more you practice, the
better you’ll become.
Sing songs without breathing
This isn’t a structured exercise, more something I’ve done
over the years for amusement that I’m pretty sure has a benefit to my vocals on
any number of levels. Pick any old song that uses extreme vocals. Sing through
it as best you can, without breathing in at any point and just holding your
breath during the gaps. You will be forced eventually to take a breath. In
particularly intense songs, this can be inside the 20 second mark, with others
it will be 2 minutes into the song. Doing this pushes you to really see where
the most important places for breathing occur throughout the song and memorise
them, as well as building up your lung capacity in an indirect way.
Laying down and focusing on stomach breathing
The next exercise is designed to make you focus on breathing/expelling
air from your stomach and not your throat (this is a massively common piece of
advice from vocalists, whether they embrace it themselves or not). In theory,
the more you focus on doing it consciously, the more naturally it will come to
you unconsciously and will make the whole performing vocals shindig a lot
easier.
Lay down flat on your back. Put your hands just a little bit
above your belly button and below where your ribcage ends. Breathe in through
your nose for 5 seconds. Feel which muscles in your torso are working, and how
it feels like it’s actually your stomach that’s expanding (if it doesn’t then
you’re doing it wrong). Hold your breath and make sure no air is expelled for
10 seconds or as long as you can hold it, then expel the air in your lungs
slowly over a period of 5 seconds.
Again, this exercise is fairly indirect, but it helps to
focus on the breathing technique to be used on stage, as it maximises the
amount of air you take in and makes fully sure you take it in with your
diaphragm.
In conclusion, I don’t use all of these
exercises regularly, as I’m fairly good with my breathing technique. At least I
think I am, and I can pull off anything I write without particular focus on
breathing. My general advice would be “don’t be a pussy”. If I can do it, you
can. I’m asthmatic and if pushed can belt a scream longer than any vocalist I’ve
met in the flesh, and this is without any kind of regular breathing
exercises. The key thing is while you’re
learning to do vocals, practice regularly, maybe even get a few lessons from a
classically trained singer (as I intend to do, given I know I could improve in
this particular area), and don’t give up. At the end of the day nobody respects
Chris Barnes because he can hold a scream, people love him for the tones he gets
out of his throat, so don’t sweat it if you can’t get a particularly long
scream or you find the whole breathing thing difficult to get to grips with.
Just keep at it, and if all else fails, listen to the professionals, some of
them aren’t that good at it themselves!
-E
Tomorrow’s post: 7 Myths About Metal Vocals And How They’ll
Affect Your Experience As A Vocalist.
Today’s post is
centred around, as the title states, warm ups and starting rituals. Are they
really necessary? I’ve met vocalists who go straight up on stage, no
preparation whatsoever and just scream their hearts out. And by contrast, I
know people who have painstakingly detailed ways of warming up that they never
deviate from. The purpose of this post is to run you through a number of
different warm ups that some people swear by so that you can try them out, as
well as give a bit more thought as to what warm ups do to your throat and the
purpose behind what I call ‘start up rituals’.
A quick definition I lifted from google tells us that a warm
up can be understood as “exercising in preparation for strenuous activity” (wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn).
This quick definition fits vocal performance as well as it does mundane exercise,
given that the Vocal Chords are in fact muscles. Your throat creates all the
different sounds that it can emit by vibrating the two ‘vocal folds’ contained
within your larynx together (for the moment we’ll completely ignore use of the
false chords), with different frequencies of vibration creating different pitches
of sound. Hence, by warming up you allow the vocal folds to warm up and they’ll
react a lot differently to if you hadn’t warmed them up.
While warming up isn’t always strictly necessary (oftentimes
you’ll find yourself in a situation where you don’t have time for whatever
reason, and it’s not the end of the world if you don’t), but it can make a
massive amount of difference to your throat’s stamina, ability to create tones,
the overall range of your voice and the amount of control you have over your
throat. In general vocal performance becomes a million times easier having done
a warm up. The only situation where I wouldn’t warm up would be if I were
trying to replicate a vocalist’s tone who clearly didn’t warm up before hand,
or had a fairly throaty and simple tone e.g. Abbath from Immortal, or numerous
other prominent black metal vocalists.
But what warm ups can you do? I’ll describe 7 different
types of specific warm up I’ve tried and experiment with over the years, giving
an overview of the technique and my opinion on its effectiveness, and any
interesting points about that respective warm up.
1)Traditional singing warm up – ‘do re mi fa so lah te do’
Pick a note, any old note (for the non-musical amongst you,
just pick a low deep kind of a tone), then sing that note on ‘do’, slowly by
increments of a tone (for non-musicians, any small increment will do) singing
each word with each note as you go up. You can also do this in growls and
screams, but I wouldn’t advise it without being warmed up first.
I use this technique all the time as a standard initial warm
up, and as it can take you through your entire dynamic range, I don’t really
see any particular weakness with this warm up, apart from maybe the weird looks
you get in a venue growling along to a Julie Andrews song. I mean seriously.
2)Melissa Cross Approach
In her ‘Zen of Screaming’ DVD, Cross takes you through about
14 different warm up exercises and different students performing them all in
their own respective vocal range in a clean tone. Her exercises invariably have
you making strange noises (e.g Mee- gee monkeys, Wee-ee Wee-ee Wee-ee Wee’s and
trying to replicate the sound of a French doorbell) up and down a scale, much
like the ‘do re mi’ exercise detailed above.
Having tried the exercises, I don’t really find them useful
at all. They barely even warmed up my throat from the cold street I had just
come in off. While many famous and, in some cases, quite talented vocalists
swear by her warm ups and take her word as gospel, I don’t. You can get the
desired effects of this warm up by doing the ‘do re mi’ exercise, and look like
a LOT less of an idiot than if you walking around saying “mee- gee, mee- gee”
in different pitches for half an hour. By all means get the DVD and try them
out yourself if interested, but these exercises proved entirely worthless (and
on one occasion actually detrimental) to my vocal ability.
3)The Pitched Shout Exercise
This warm up is based around pitched shouting. You start off
with a pitched shout at a normal speaking volume, and repeat it five times.
Then increase your volume by a small increment and repeat five times. Repeat
this process going from your normal speaking level of volume through to as loud
as you can go while keeping the shout at a constant pitch. Repeat the entire
process of going from normal levels to your loudest pitched shout three times.
More if it’s a cold day, or you feel you really need to get particularly warmed
up.
This exercise is great for initially warming up your throat
in a hurry, because it’s quick and efficient. It also requires sustained effort
from your vocal chords and in general is a really easy one to remember and use.
Personally I use the word “hey” just to try and not look/sound too weird when
sitting backstage singing to myself, but it can work with anything. The only
downside of this exercise is it only deals with volume, not with dynamic range,
but as long as you do it along with other exercises in order to cover warming
up your throat fully, it’s an amazingly useful little warm up.
4)Singing clean pitches of what you would when growling
An alternative to the ‘do re mi’ exercise is just singing
through the songs you’re going to sing in a clean tone, making sure to include
all the changes in dynamic range and timing in the song, rather than growling
them.
While not wholly as effective, it can be useful in a limited
sort of way. One positive of this warm up is it embeds the vocal structures of
songs in your mind, and they’re easy to forget when you’re zipping about the
stage from right to left, headbanging like a maniac and trying your best not to
trip up over the bass drum mic or crash into your guitarist. Hell, I do this
exercise for that very reason alone a lot of the time.
5)Extremes of the range of your throat
This isn’t really a structured exercise, but I do utilise it
when warming up. Basically the two ends of your vocal range area really deep ‘ee’
drone sound at the bottom and a silly high falsetto at the other end. Basically,
I just play around with saying different things or singing along with songs
exclusively in these ranges. The resulting sounds are usually something
resembling Mongolian Throat singing (look it up, it’s awesome!) or King
Diamond/3 Inches Of Blood like vocals, which are hilariously off key when I
sing them, but as long as I’m using that range it serves it’s purpose of
warming my throat up.
6)Humming
Just humming for a sustained period of five minutes or so is
an excellent vocal warm up, as humming is created by making the vocal folds
vibrate together really quickly and this, unsurprisingly, warms them up a good
deal. Don’t stick to humming one thing, hum sustained notes, hum melodies- do
whatever. Variety is the spice of life after all, and also helps you get that
little bit closer to your full dynamic range.
7)Growling along with things
Last but not least, simply growling along with things is a
good finishing warm up. Whether blasting through ‘Pursuit of Vikings’ or
singing one of my own songs, it lets me know whether the warm ups I’ve done so
far have been effective or not, and whether I need to continue warming up or not.
It’s usually best to do something slow to mid paced, like the afore mentioned
Amon Amarth song, as you’re testing out whether the other warm ups have been
effective or not. It can also be a good chance to recap on songs you’re not
totally confident with before a show.
While the warm ups detailed above are the main ones I know
that me, or people I know, use a lot, they’re by no means the only ones out
there for you to find and try out! Hell, even talking with a mate for half an
hour can be a good way of warming up. I find that if I rush out of the house to
a practice straight out of bed, and without having spoken with anyone, my voice
is about 3 times as hard to warm up because it hasn’t been used at all
beforehand (also, for this reason doing vocals in the evening time is usually
easier and more comfortable because you’ve been doing indirect warm ups all day
long! If forced to perform in the morning/afternoon, take special care to make
sure you’ve warmed up adequately).
Thus far I haven’t mentioned what I call ‘start up rituals’.
A start up ritual is something you do before every show in order to get into a
certain frame of mind, as well as warming yourself up for the impending
performance. Anything can be incorporated into it, from specialised warm ups
and physical exercises to touching your lucky rabbit’s foot or invoking Cthulhu
to finally make his long awaited entrance onto this pitiful material plane. The
purpose of it isn’t wholly to get warmed up or in a frame of mind, it’s kind of
both, and fairly hard to convey the purpose of. I have my own start up rituals
that some of you will know, and others won’t, but I’m not going to share them.
Discover what works for you to get you pumped before a show, or puts you in
that truly fabulous, or serial killer mind set.
And that, dear readers, is as close to a basic guide to
warming up as I think I can write.
-E
Tomorrow’s post: Breathing, and why it’s not just a thing
you do to keep living.
as this is the first week of me doing the blog, I’m
going to do a post every day. As I’m new to this whole blogging thing,
figured it would be appropriate to start off with a bunch of articles aimed at complete
beginners to performing vocals. So without any ado whatsoever, I give you 10
Pro Tips For Beginners To Extreme Vocals.
1) If it hurts your throat stop. This is not negotiable in
my opinion. During the first while of starting out, a small amount of dull
aching can occur, but no sharp pain in your throat should ever happen. Doing
this can lead to permanent vocal chord damage. (Though just to emphasise- this
is my opinion. Some vocalists scar up their throats and massively affect their
normal talking voice in order to get the tones they want when singing, which is
fine, but it’s a sacrifice they were willing to make. This first piece of
advice is there to prevent permanent damage to your throat, ignore it at your
own risk).
2) While you’re starting out, don’t worry about timing or
singing along with anything- just practice getting tones. Once you’ve got a
tone in your throat you like, take a break for 5 minutes, go back to it, and
try to figure out how you got that tone. Repeat this ad nauseam. As well as
training your throat and your ears, it also aids in building up stamina.
3)There is no substitute for regular practice in terms of
developing your voice. Your vocal chords are built of muscles after all and
like any muscles, they need to be developed slowly over time. Only practice until you can feel your voice getting tired then give up for at least a few hours, if not the whole day, then try again tomorrow. You wouldn’t try
lifting a stupidly heavy weight anvil before working out at the gym for a while
beforehand, so don’t try and bust out a Devourment song when you can only get
out a 2 second rasp and it hurts you while you’re doing it.
4) What you listen to influences you unconsciously, so if
you want to end up sounding a certain way, a good way of working towards that
is listening to that certain band/vocalist a lot.
5) Once you work your way onto singing actual songs, don’t
necessarily start off with songs that require lots of technicality or
particularly extreme vocals, try something easier, for example Kiss or AC/DC
are both fairly simple bands to sing along to, and can be fun to put a more
extreme spin on (even singing along
with a pop song off the radio can be a good exercise. Shock! Horror!). The
reason I suggest this is to build up stamina before you try tackling the harder
speed songs, meaning that hopefully it’ll be far easier to sing along with fast
songs after you’ve been doing it with mid paced ones for a while.
6) Use the whole of your face to get a sound when you’re experimenting
with getting a tone. It can both sound and look stupid but the way you move and
shape your face muscles can affect vocal tone, e.g. try moving your forehead
muscles when screaming, notice that as well as your voice naturally raising because
you’re thinking about moving the muscles upward, it can also add a different
overtone to the scream. And don’t worry if you’re pulling silly faces to get a
sound you like, doing it off-stage people call it weird, do it on stage and
they call it “stage presence”.
7) In my experience what I eat or drink before I perform can
affect tone, be aware of this when you’re learning. Avoid milk a couple of
hours before performing as it can coat your vocal chords and massively affect
their vibrations and hence, affect the tone of your growl. The actual problem
with milk is that it coats the vocal chords, as it’s a really thick substance,
and makes it hard to get the necessary vibration to get out a growl. By all
means experiment with different things e.g. I can get a far deeper growl when I’ve drunk a can of Coca-Cola.
8) Practice standing up and remember you can breathe through
your nose as well as your mouth, it will affect tone and allow you to breathe
far better, you’d be amazed how many people this doesn’t occur to.
9) Project your voice upwards and don’t sing at the floor,
and keep your mouth open at first. This will help you get a decent volume to
your growls and screams (I’ll discuss mouth shapes and their influence on tone
in a later post, but for now, focus on just getting a decent volume on a normal
growl or scream).
10) Once you think you’re happy with your voice, try showing
a friend that’s into metal, as they’ll hopefully be honest with you, and if you
actually intend on singing in a band you’ll have to sing in front of people
sooner or later, no point sitting in your garden shed growling away to no-one but your pet cat forever (no matter how metal the cat may be) .
Tomorrow’s post: Warm Ups & Starting Rituals: A
Pointless Waste Of Time Or Totally Indispensable?
I’m Elliot, I’m 21 years old and I’m a student. In a great
many ways, I’m completely normal. However, as an Extreme Metal vocalist, I
spend a good portion of my life making inhuman noises and growls into a
microphone for the benefit of audiences everywhere!
Over my 6 years or so of experience doing what I will
henceforth refer to as ‘death growling’ (though I often perform other kinds of
extreme vocal, that is an explanation I’ll save for another, much longer post),
I’ve been fascinated by the different sounds and techniques of other vocalists,
both extreme or no, and tried to incorporate aspects of their styles into the
way I sing and perform. However, beyond this form of learning, there is a near-total
lack of what I would call good, solid and informed advice on the subject of extreme vocals despite the near endless books
and tutorials for other instruments in the genre. While there are numerous ‘how
to’ guides on the internet, and the infamous ‘Zen of Screaming’ DVD’s by
Melissa Cross as well as billions of utterly useless youtube tutorials on the
subject, most of what these fonts of knowledge espouse is either really
inaccessible, stupid or in the worst cases, just plain wrong.
The aim of this blog is to provide a
dedicated source of knowledge and information for extreme vocalists of
whichever genre or amount of experience to read on the intricacies and nuances
of extreme vocals as well as the basics.
What do I consider to be extreme vocals? In today’s musical
sphere, there is an endless supply of bands that have what I would consider an “extreme
vocal style”. From the screaming of pop tinged metalcore bands of the
mid-noughties to the guttural indecipherable tones of slam death metal and
everything in between, any kind of noise that a person can make with their
throat that isn’t traditional melodic singing, I would consider to be worth
attention. So whether you’re singing in
a throwback New York Hardcore style band or rasping blasphemies and praising
the name of Satan in a black metal band, there’ll hopefully be something on
this site that you can use to better your art, or at least give you an
interesting read!
I intend to use this blog to post advice, exercises and in
depth analyses of different vocals styles as well as every so often interviews/
Q+A sessions with vocalists I respect/admire. Most of what will be on this blog
is my personal opinion on vocals as an art form, and consequently is massively
biased and subjective, however I will do my best to avoid this as much as
possible. Feel free to take what you will, and leave whatever you disagree with
and develop your own ideas and style.
A bit more information about me? So nice of you to ask. I’ve been doing extreme
vocals since I was 15. I started off by singing along with Children of Bodom
and Cradle of Filth tracks off my iPod while walking around, not really
thinking much of it. Then over time, I got better and started to take it more
seriously, practicing regularly and attempting to actually replicate the vocal
tones of songs I was listening to. After a while, I built up confidence enough
to go looking for a band. Following a few completely non-functioning bands I
either tried out for, or attempted to start, I joined my first band Phyrexia in
2008, and the rest is history. I’m currently in three bands (Phyrexia, Aeternum
and Wolfsword for anyone interested enough to look me up) and spend the
majority of my time either writing for or practicing with these bands, planning
or running shows or attending other
peoples’ shows. I’m into all kinds of music, though as you can probably tell by
this point I spend most of my time listening to Metal of one kind or another.
My main influences on my vocal styles nowadays are George “Corpsegrinder”
Fischer, Tom Araya, Johan Hegg, Chance Garnette, Angela Gossow, Nergal, Glen
Benton and Bruce Dickinson, with honourable mentions going to Abbath, Tomas
Lindberg, Trevor Strnad and Sean LaCanne. When I’m not doing stuff based around
music, I play bass, read fantasy novels and play far too many video games for
my own good. In addition to this, I’m a fairly stoic atheist and have a really
dark sense of humour, this will most likely come through at points during this
blog.
Here's a link to a track on the last release I did: