Mixed Register

SuperFrost

New member
Anybody knows how do I sing in mixed register? When I sing in chest voice , and I tried to force. Not force as in compress it , force as in really let all the voice out soon it will break. Any ways to make my head voice have more nicer tone ?

For example this http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NM_0gNAlJvA
Is he singing in mixed register? Chest ? Head ? All the way or some parts ?
 
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Anybody knows how do I sing in mixed register? When I sing in chest voice , and I tried to force. Not force as in compress it , force as in really let all the voice out soon it will break. Any ways to make my head voice have more nicer tone ?
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Hi SuperFrost,
I'm trying to find my mix too :) and it's essential essential! (and it sounds good also)

What you're trying to do is "force" or pull-chest, meaning trying to force a full chest resonance over your bridge at (maybe) E4. Usually, people would start to flip into pure head voice which doesn't sound too awesome in the contemporary world. What you want is a MIX, meaning a mixture of chest and head resonance. Even mix itself can be LIGHT or HEAVY.
HEAVY can be seen here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j0CvItiNMsA
check that out. It is as if James Kelly phonate on his head resonance and gradually add "bite" into the sound with pharyngeal vowels/elements into it to give it more presence or kinda like making it meaty.

Hope this helps.
I replied this because I don't wanna you to ruin your cords.
 
I Think when u hit F# and above and not falsetto/headvoice,your in ur mixed register le

mix voice has the resonance of headvoice, and falsetto is not the same as headvoice. F# is usually for counter-tenors, usually Tenors start "flipping" @ E4. If you heard Michael Jackson's training with Seth Riggs, yeah, he started to pull at F#, G.
 
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