If An Audience Is Going To Receive Youre Message
If an audiend is going to receive your message they need to be comfortable with you. That means they need to be vulnerable, mentally available and ready to hear what you have to share.
The Areas You CAN Control
Anything you can do to help them believe you is worth doing. This can be done in the way you promote yourself, the way you look and the way you sing your message. Those are all areas you can control.
The Areas You CAN’T Control
There are other areas that you may, or may not be able to anticipate, and this means you need to be ready to make things right in real-time.
* If the listeners are tired, it’s your job to revive them. This may mean adding a song that gets them up on their feet, singing, clapping and getting some much needed oxygen. Once they’re mentally and physically refreshed you can get to your message.
* If they’re distracted, your job is to get them focused . . . on you and your message. This may take a bit of personal story telling that engages then personally. Do your homework and know what your audience it likely to be interested in. Using name/stories from their community, sports teams etc. will draw them into what you are sharing. Remember: It’s about them, not you.
* If technical issues are getting between your message and the heart of the listener you need to do something about it. If they’re cringing or leaving because the sound level is too high, or look like they’re hearing more track/band than words do what it takes to change things. When in doubt ask the audience between songs. “Is the sound a little loud?” or “Are you hearing more instruments that vocals?” Then, in your most friendly tone ask the sound person to lower the accompaniment, or overall sound level. Better to offend one sound person than several hundred in the audience. You can also have a trusted ear seated on the isle in the middle of the house who can go back and suggest some changes to the sound person. (This, of course, should be pre-arranged to avoid an awkward moment.)
Summary
Your job isn’t just to get up there, sing your songs and then sit down. You are responsible for successfully communicating your message. Do what is necessary to get that done well.
Tags: chris beatty, performance coaching, performance training, singing lessons, Vocal Coac, voice training
This entry was posted on Monday, October 26th, 2009 at 11:11 pm and is filed under Uncategorized. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.