Find your NATURAL Singing Voice: A Beginners Guide! | Lewis Thomson | Skillshare

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Find your NATURAL Singing Voice: A Beginners Guide!

teacher avatar Lewis Thomson, null

Watch this class and thousands more

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Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Watch this class and thousands more

Get unlimited access to every class
Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Lessons in This Class

    • 1.

      Intro

      1:20

    • 2.

      What Does YOUR Voice Actually Sound Like?

      1:33

    • 3.

      Let's FEEL Tone!

      4:32

    • 4.

      Supporting YOUR Voice

      5:59

    • 5.

      Let's Actually Make Sound!

      5:16

    • 6.

      Record, Review, Reflect

      1:56

    • 7.

      I'm Feeling Good Today!

      0:56

    • 8.

      There's Your Voice!

      0:35

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About This Class

This is for those that say they “can’t sing” or that their voice just doesn’t sound right! Nonsense! 

I’m Louie, a vocal coach who works with singers of all levels and in this class I want to help you find your natural voice, not a forced “singer voice” or an imitation of someone else. 

We’ll strip things right back and focus on:

  • Connecting singing to your speaking voice

  • Getting comfortable with your natural tone

  • Breathing in a way that actually supports your sound

  • Singing simple phrases without pressure or strain

There’s no complicated theory here and no expectation that you’re already confident. This is about awareness, curiosity and learning how your voice works when it’s allowed to be free.

By the end of the class, you’ll have a clear starting point for your voice and a simple way to track your progress going forward! 

Meet Your Teacher

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Lewis Thomson

null

Teacher

Hi, I'm Louie Voxx, a full time professional vocal coach based in Scotland. My goal is simple, to show people that if they can talk, they can sing. A University of London graduate, I've worked with some of the UK's best up and coming artists alongside countless musical theatre performers and as a former performer myself, I understand exactly how frustrating it can be when you don't know how to get the most out of your voice.

My programmes are designed to take the stress off singing and give you the tools you need to take your voice wherever you please! So if singing is something you've always wanted to learn to do or take to the next level; Then why don't you give my courses a try!

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Level: Beginner

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Transcripts

1. Intro: Hey, I'm Louis, vocal coach and studio lead, and way too obsessed with how the voice works. Welcome to my Skillshare class. Let me ask you something. Have you ever felt like singing isn't quite for you, that your voice is fine and all, but it's just a bit Meh. I totally get it, because I was there myself. However, your voice is enough. You just haven't been shown how to fully tap into it yet. This class is about helping you get out of your own way. No fluff, no fancy technique walls, finding you a real tone, not your singer voice, because remember, folks, if you work with me, you already know this singing and talking are synonymous. Number two, getting more confident in what you already have. And number three, starting a practice that's actually enjoyable. Keep it real, honest, beginner friendly. And by the end of this class, I want you to have uploaded a video once before and one after of you singing even just a simple line like, I'm feeling good today. Something super simple, and we're going to compare the differences at the end. So grab a bottle of water and preferably a quiet room, and that's something. 2. What Does YOUR Voice Actually Sound Like? : So we're starting with a mindset shift, and this is a big one. Most people think that singing equals imitation. Maybe you want to sound like your favorite artist, but great singing, great, true singing doesn't come from copying. It comes from using what we already have. Try this. Say, in a simple, chill, very relaxed voice, Hey, how's it going? Now, what I want to do this time is extend the last going. Make it a little bit more melodic. Hey, how's it going? Go. G. G. Notice how we're not really doing anything different. We're just extending simple vowels here. That that is your true voice. That's you. And this is what I would call the foundation where we can open everything else up and expand from there. Think of it like your default operating software. We're not installing this fake, shiny new software. We're just getting rid of the blotware that comes with it. If you catch yourself mimicking someone else's voice, say your favorite singer, ask yourself, is this what I would sound like when I'm talking? And if you no, then reset. Think about the technique. Going, go, go and try again. 3. Let's FEEL Tone! : Et's talk tone. And more importantly, let's feel tone. Try this with me. Right now, what I want you to do is I wanted to just do Mm. Mm hmm. As if someone's saying something that you really agree with. Mm hmm. Mm. Mm hmm. Mm hmm. Now, don't push anything. Don't try and, you know, create anything that you wouldn't ordinarily create. But just ease into it. Mmm. Mm hmm. Hmm. Hmm, now, extend it. See the similarities with going. Mm. Mm, Mmhmm. Mm hmm. Mm hmm. Now, all I want to do is I want to open the mouth. Don't do anything else it's different. Alright, keep everything the same. Mm. Mm hmm. Mm hmm. Huh, uh huh. Ah, uh huh. Ah. Ah. Ah. Now, experiment with different vowels here. Maybe Ah, doesn't feel that great. Let's try oh instead. Mm hmm. Mm hmm. Ooh Ooh. Ooh. Oh, Oh. You'll notice how effortless this truly feels. Now, this isn't just nice and comfortable in our chest range. We can go higher with this, too. Mm hmm. Mm. Mm. Like, you really agree with someone. Mm. Mm. Mm. Ah, ah, ah. Now, as you go higher, might feel a little bit of tension creeping in, but this is nice and gentle and relaxed. Mmm. I'm just thinking about agreeing. Mm. Ah, ah. When we start to open our mouth, we don't have to work harder. We keep everything the same. We're not pushing. This is called resonation. We're allowing the sound to resonate here and come out. So if I wanted to create a little bit of a bigger sound, Mmm. Mm. Ah. Then open it wide, L a yawn. Ah Ah. Now, I'm louder, but I'm not pushing or changing anything. It's just wider. Ah, h. And that's the big difference. If I was to push, this might not sound great, but if it's a good example. Ahh. Oh, it sounds quite throating. It sounds awful. I just allow it to be nice and open, though, like the yawn. Ha, ha. I'm sighing into it, greeing. Ah, ah. Big difference. Now, why is space so important? Realistically, I could do a whole other Skillshare class discussing resonance in and of itself. But for now, if we don't create enough space, the sound begins to exit through our nose, and this is where things get really nasally, right? Really quiet up here and awful sounding. This is why it is important that we not only create space in the mouth here, but we keep everything nice and open and relaxed here, too. If we don't we get this. Hm. Huh. Huh. And you can tell it's coming through the nose because if I do this, it'll stop. Huh. Huh, haha. Close the mouth. Hmm. Hmm. If I open it slightly? Huh. It's coming through both. If I open it fully, the sound can come out of the mouth, very, very, very little amounts come through the nose where it's unnoticeable. Ha. Ha. Ha. So we really for this exercise, we really want to be exploring the different shapes we can create not only with our mouth, but back here, too, keeping everything nice and open and relaxed. So after our exploration of our shapes back here and here, have a think to yourself. Where does it feel easiest? Were there parts where it started to get a little bit shaky? Maybe you went up in range and you started to get a little bit voice cracks kicking in here and there. Keep all of this up here because this is a clue of where your true tone truly lives. Oh 4. Supporting YOUR Voice: In the singing sphere, we seem to talk a lot about breathing correctly and breathing incorrectly, engaging your core and directing your breath to your diaphragm. It can often sound really overwhelming and quite confusing at time, but it doesn't have to be that way. It doesn't have to be mystical. So let's keep it useful and grounded, and let's just fix it right now. For this exercise, I'd like for you to stand tall, but stay quite loose, keep your shoulders draped over, nice and relaxed, keep your chest pointing to the ceiling, as well, and make sure that we're not allowing our knees to tighten either, keeping really nice and relaxed. This is going to help us really maximize our capacity when we start to get those inhales going. Reason why we want to breathe in through the nose is so that we keep the air moistened and not dry. Remember, whatever we bring in air, food, drink, it passes through our vocal folds. So we want to be treating them as nice as we can, especially when we're doing purposeful work like this. So making sure that we're breathing in through the nose and that our breath goes to what feels like the stomach area. So I like to imagine that we've just had a big dinner, and we went. Big, big belly. It can help by pretending that we're pushing the air to our lower back. So you're going to want to put one hand on your belly button and one hand on your hip and really just allowing the hip and the stomach to inflate fully. This is what I would call a deep diaphragmatic breath, and it is important that we get this secured because this is the engine to our singing voice. From there, once we get a big diaphragmatic, deep breath in, why to start letting air out on a z sound? Like What you might have found is the stomach begins to retract. If you keep exhaling on this zi sound, you might even feel your core muscles begin to engage. This is what we call support. Without support, it's like riding a bike with loose wheels. I'll come across wobbly, inconsistent and often pitchy. We don't have to work extremely hard, though. You don't have to have an apex, but you definitely need to feel your stomach begin to tuck in. And what we're doing here is we're sending a consistent flow of air to our vocal folds so that they can vibrate at the pitch we're asking it to consistently, not inconsistently. You can imagine if we send up an inconsistent amount of air that our vocal folds are going to vibrate inconsistently, it's gonna sound really pitchy like so. Without support. Mmm. With support. Uh, I added a little bit of a brat in there, too. However, you should want it to remain clean and steady. For all my clients, I always recommend that they do this exercise until they can exhale for 30 seconds. This is a good ballpark, because whether you're asthmatic or not, it's not about the quantity of breath that we're letting out. It's actually focusing more on how we're managing the air that we have. So we get our deep breath in. Then we go. Mm. By around 20 seconds, you might start to feel the alarm bells going off that we're running out of air and that the core muscles are working real hard. This is where we introduce something called a relaxed response. You're going to relax more, relax the shoulders. Again, relax the knees, falling back into your starting position and bringing any sort of tension that crops up to our core. Really tightening up that core. As you're going along and you're letting more and more air out, you will need to manage this air more and more and more. Think of it like rope, right? We've got our hands here and the ropes coming through like so, right? It's gone quite fast, and we're losing a lot of rope right now. So we need to tighten our grip on the rope coming through. We're not stopping it. Ooh. We're letting it pass through, but we are tightening our hands on the rope there so that we can slow it down and make sure that we're dictating how much air we're letting pass through. That is the function of our support system there. So what I need you to do here is I need you to do this over and over and over, try and get further and further and further, relaxing more as you progress through, and engaging the core more as you progress through. Relaxing and engaging whilst keeping the sound consistent. Try to get to 10 seconds, try and get to 15 seconds, and then try and get to 30 seconds. Once you reach there, I'd be happy, but you can continue this work too, and further honing your skill to manage your air. The movement should feel lower and effective. And if it feels really gentle with our core being firmly engaged and the sounds consistent, then perfect. We're doing it correctly. Remember, the best breathwork is quietly effective. Right. 5. Let's Actually Make Sound! : Alright, so with fundamentals out of the way, let's actually makes the sound. Let's start with I'm feeling good today. Speak it like you're talking to a friend. I'm feeling good today. Try it different a little bit try it a little bit lower. I'm feeling I'm feeling good today. Try a little bit higher. And if you croak and you don't feel comfortable vocally with all these exercises, that's fine. Don't think you're gonna damage your voice at all. We're just exploring what we have here. So let's go super high. I'm feeling good today. Yeah, like, I'm feeling good today. Really quite animated and open. Yeah, I'm feeling good today. I'm feeling good today. I'm feeling good today. Pay attention to where this feels. I'm feeling good today. Now, once you've found something that feels quite comfortable, let's focus on the notes that's actually been said here. I'm feeling good today. Mm hmm, mm hmm. Again, going back to that gentle hum. Mm hmm, mm mm hmm. Mm hmm. Huh. Now, if you have a piano available, let's try and put some simple melodies to that. Mm hmm. I'm feeling good. I'm feeling good. I'm feeling good. To Tom hmm. Mm hmm. Remember, I'm not pushing or doing anything different from what I've just said here. I'm feeling good today. Mm hmm, mm. I'm feeling good. Mm hmm hmm today. Mm hmm. Again, keeping everything nice and relaxed and open. I'm really finding my natural tone here. Now, take some time to explore this further throughout your range. Go a little bit lower than you would normally speak. It's the whole point here, right? Is that we're tying together our talking voice and our singing voice. We're blurring the lines here. So, for me, I'm going to go a little bit lower. Let's go here. Um, I'm feeling good. I'm feeling good. And it might feel really stupid. It might feel really inauthentic, but that's fine. Mm. I'm feeling good, today. Ha. And explore how this might require you to change the shape here. You might find that everything has to be more open. Ha, I'm feeling good, today. Mmmmmm HHH, hah. Let's go a little bit higher. Mmm mm mm Again, finding where this is placed, okay? Be really gentle with things. Um, I'm feeling good today, feeling good today. Ah, um, Mm hmm. I'm feeling good today. When you go higher, you might find that you don't have as much power and warmth and the rich tone that you had when you were down at the bottom end, but that's fine. This is something that we can develop on and build after we found where it lived. I think the most important thing to remember is that throughout all of this, we're not diving into a singing voice. We're not Oh, we're not suddenly in the singing voice now. It's the same as our talking voice. All we're doing is we're just extending certain things, keeping things relaxed and implementing a little bit of technique, being a bit more purposeful with what we're doing. That's all we're doing here. That's the difference there. The difference from me talking and singing, there isn't much. The difference from talking to singing, the difference from talking to singing isn't much. So looking back at our exercise work, have a think about what was easiest. What felt really comfortable? What happened when we felt a little bit uncomfortable when we were pushing the boundaries a bit. But again, was it pitchy? Did we feel a little bit of tension coming in here? These are all things to store up here, again, that's going to help us find our true natural voice. So, looking back at that exercise there, have a think, what was the easiest part of it? Was it maybe in my lower range where I kind of talk mostly in that felt a little bit comfortable? And alternatively, where felt most awkward. Perhaps it was when we were going up in range in an area that we don't really talk in all that often. The answer to these questions tells you where to put your attention to when you're starting to develop your voice. Oh 6. Record, Review, Reflect: M so for me, this is where it gets a little bit more personal. I need you to pick three vibes. So chilled, gritty, angry, soft, smooth, whatever works best for you. And what I need you to do is sing or sing. I've got something to say. Now, say it with each vibe. For me, I'm going to be doing tired, joyful and bold. So I've got something to say. Tired. I've got something to say. Joyful? I've got something to say. Bold. I've got something to say. Notice the changes you've made that matched each of the vibes. Now, with carrying the previous rules that we've learned in this session, let's try and sing whilst keeping those three vibes. So, for me, tired. I've got something to say. Joyful. I've got something to say. Bold. I've got something to say. Notice the changes you made on top of the previous changes you made. So out of all those tones, have a think which one felt most like you? There's no wrong answer here either, but it does give you a general idea of your vocal fingerprint. And just a quick note, you might have noticed throughout this class that at the end, I'm asking you all of these reflective questions. As singers, this is something we must do to ensure that we're making progress and making the correct decisions throughout. Record, review, reflect. That is how you grow as a singer. I. 7. I'm Feeling Good Today! : Alright. So here's your class project. Something super simple but really powerful. I want you to record yourself singing a short line before the class, something really low key and casual, like, I'm feeling good today, something really simple. Then record yourself singing the same line again after you've finished all of our lessons today. Share both versions here or even just jot down the main differences, what was easier? What surprised you, and what was highlighted to you that you're really excited to keep working on. And also just permission. Don't worry. This isn't about perfection. It's about noticing your progress, even within just one class, which, honestly, in my opinion, is the best part of learning a sign. 8. There's Your Voice! : So that's it. The first real step towards owning your voice and bringing the real you out in your music. Remember, you don't need to sound like kind of onee else. Your voice is utterly unique to you. So use that. And trust me from personal experience, the more you use it, the more you connect with it. And the more you connect with it, the more you'll love it. So keep exploring, keep practicing. I'm Louis Vox. Thanks for hanging out with me today and keeping your voice real.