Recently, I’ve been teaching a series of classes at our church for current and developing worship leaders. We have a congregation of over 7,500 with seven weekend services, plus weekly teen and children’s events and more. That adds up to a lot of very busy singers and instrumentalists.
One of the critical skills we focus on is being able to reproduce a good blendable, relaxed and resonant tone quality. Here’s how we get there:
As the singers start getting on the same page, by thinking the same principles and using the same technique, the well-blended tone is there, and it’s amazing to hear. What began as a group of individual voices has become one voice, with many participants and multiple parts.
Remember: The key is in being able to reproduce that blendable tone by memorizing the process and physical sensations. Our singers now have a tone quality that they can more easily recall and reproduce. So can yours.
To learn more about achieving these skills with your singers check out the Tone, Blend and Group Warm-Ups CD’s. They are available individually or in the Singer and Groups sets and physical products or downloads at the Vocal Coach store.
What helps you find your best tone quality? Let me know in the “comments” section below. I’d love to hear your thoughts.
Tags: chris beatty, singers, singing, singing lessons, tone quality, vocal coach, vocal tone, vocal training, vocalcoach.com
This entry was posted on Tuesday, June 8th, 2010 at 3:07 pm and is filed under Choir Directors, Performance, Singing Subjects, Tips Tailored for You, Tone, Worship Team. 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.