Thanks for the welcome and discussion. Im going to try to get part 2 up tomorrow. Until then, Ill answer some of the posts in the thread. If you asked a question, etc, Ill go in order below.
ALivingSight-
Glad to see our taking your voice seriously and have some dedication. Its rare these days. Im not going to lecture anyone about their lifestyle, but here are some things to consider. You said smoking hasnt affected you. You have no real way to know that. Just because you made progress doesnt mean it wouldnt have been better or faster without smoking. I could drive 2 miles with my emergency brake on and say see, no problem, I made progress. Had it not been on however, I would have done better, and not have caused damage to my car that may not show up until further down the road.
Since you cant compare what would have been, you dont know for sure. The other thing, and what I would caution most about is, dont mistake a lack of symptoms for not getting damage. Youre right in that peoples bodies react different. Some rebel immediately and some take abuse for a while and then suddenly show serious damage.
There can also be things going on that you dont immediately see. Heat and fumes being sucked though your cords and into your lung is damaging. There is no way for it not to. It can come back to haunt you after a while when nodes, etc, pop up and as you cant feel them until they are prominent, you cant tell they are there until its already a serious issue. Again, just something to think about. I hope your approach works out for you and you continue to progress.
Forherdeadeyes-
Sorry to hear youre having so much trouble. I would recommend going back to the Zen of screaming and working through the exercises whether you think they help your scream or not. Screaming and clean singing (I dont make a distinction) both rely on relaxed vocal production and solid practice. Any good exercises will benefit your voice even if youre not making gritty tones at the time. Remember, if you want to drive fast, you still have to take the time to learn how to drive stick smoothly. Ill be doing some tips on vocal booths and practicing in part two, so check it out. It may help.
P-E
1.Yes, you can alter the pitch of the scream, if you can do one, you can definitely do the other.
2.What you describe is a common thing and can be due to several factors. Ill due a short list below and it should help people understand why I say you cant train someone in vocals via youtube video, forums, or any instruction where the coach cant hear you and examine your physiology. Theres no substitute for one on one work.
A.
You could be using to much throat constriction adding excessive pressure and preventing transition
B.
You could be compressing the upper chest causing breathing imbalance
C.
Your sense of high notes actually being high, as in height can be causing you to react by squeezing and reaching and causing undue tension and constriction.
D.
You could have a psychological tie that makes you feel like lightening the pressure on your voice is light or feminine and is blocking you from relaxing enough to get a larger and thicker resonance.
There are more things that could cause it as well. I think you can see how it would be impossible for me to diagnose accurately without working directly with the vocalist. As I said though, it is a common issue and getting some time in with a good trainer should fix you up. Its entirely fixable.
MondoLikeMetal-
Ill cover inhale screaming a bit in part two, but heres the basics. I have nothing against it, but dont teach it. I can do it, but have never heard a sound I couldnt get normally, so I dont bother. Ive never seen anything on long term effects, so I cant advise on that one. My issue is usually that changing back to exhale based production feels weird, and feels kind of like suddenly jamming my car into reverse while driving. It just seems awkward.
As far as rating a scream, I can do that now. If it works for you and you like it, I rate it a ten! Ive had people ask me to do this and honestly its completely subjective.
What I like to hear in screaming may not be your thing at all. What I like isnt always what seems to be in right now. So your opinion is all that matters. As far as if I heard something I thought might cause you trouble, I can say if I hear it, but without working with you, I wouldnt be able to help or want to risk shooting blind for the reasons I mentioned in part one and my other responses.
Thanks for the welcome. I hope some of this helps you, or at least gives some insight into training.
Melb shredder-
Good to see you are out there doing it. You have the experience of reality that hits many of these I learned screaming in two seconds and joined a band guys when the rigors of the road and studio hit them like a cinderblock. Youre perseverance and dedication sound like they are paying off. Cheers.
Arnaud!
Good to see you as well. Thanks the gracious compliment. I had a great time working with you as well. It was fun.
Your point is right that the right training works for clean and gritty vocals. Ill be addressing that more in part two. Many people consider them two different things and they arent. Thats definitely something I think needs to be covered as it creates allot of problems in how people approach their training.
Youre dead on with the fact that you drink and breathe with two different passages that dont allow fluids to touch the voice. The overwhelming amounts of these singers formulas, special teas, etc are snake oil. They are more placebo than anything else. Some actually contain numbing agents that make you feel like your throat is getting soothed when its just not feeling the trauma youre then convinced you can hit it with. What crap!
Abberation-
I damaged the hell out of myself and know your pain. I did it so bad I lost my voice completely for 2 weeks and then could only make creaky, frog like speech for a couple of months. I was actually told I would never do vocals again. That is what got me into seeking out how to do this stuff in a healthy way, which was a long process with allot of bullshit artists, and learning speech therapy and physiology.
The body has a muscle memory made to protect you. If its been a while and you still have issues I get the feeling it has allot to do with your body bracing for impact trying to prevent you from doing what you did before. It may be worth a single visit to an ENT or throat specialist to verify if there is any unknown trauma, and then you should be able to do your thing and get back to howling like a madman! Just look at it as a new a vocal approach and mindset. Voice 2.0 if you will!
Jevil-
There is no shortcut to good vocals. Just because you can scream doesnt mean its good screaming! (Thats not directed at you. Never heard you and you could be killer!) Most people hear the grit and think thats the end of it. Definitely check out my next Q&A post. It addresses this subject exactly. Screaming is a form of singing. They are not two different things. They rely on 90% of the same function. Besides, we all know the true shortest way to sing in a band. Be good looking. And brainless!
Maamar Hug
Rock on with that my NMOBHM brutha! Im amazed at how this stuff has made such resurgence. I saw it a few years back and to be honest kind of wrote it off. I did it for a long time and always loved that style, but thought it had run its course. I had the pleasure of working with James Luna of the band Holy Grail for quite a while. He would bring me demos to work on and I though people are doing this again? I had no idea how big it had become until a little later. Hes belting those high notes at Wacken and Castle Donnington so I guess its kind of popular again!
MaellaJohn-
I would argue screaming isnt dumb, at least not if youre doing it well. Its like anything, it can be dumbed down, but so can singing or rapping. I would consider this do you think its possible that you were able to get screaming easier since you didnt see it as so far out of reach, and you werent as inhibited? Just a thought.
As far as hating your voice, Welcome to vocals! Almost everyone does! Its the most common complaint from vocalists. Voice is a personal issue and we take it personally. Got a shit guitar tone? Bad guitar. Got a shit vocal sound- You suck! Or at least, thats how we see it. I know of some singers with long pro careers who still have trouble listening back to their own tracks and need a producer to tell them when its done.
Yes, you can vary the sound of you tone and improve on it. Getting good training and practice habits will add in increased range, resonance and a wider range of available tone variances.
You should combine it with coming to terms with what you sound like and do best. Singing has a huge bit to do with psychology, and fearing the sound creates tension and results in a poor performance becoming a self fulfilling prophecy. Everyone has an individual tone, thats what makes you awesome. Funny thing is, so many singers that hate their voice have tons of fans who love it. Its really up to them. You cant be the performer and the audience. You have to pick one. Their reaction may surprise you.
AHJTeam-
1.Congrats on kicking yourself in the ass. No reason at all you cant do it. I dont see a direct question here, but more a list of symptoms. From what I can tell they are fairly common.
2.Again, what youre describing is really common, especially with men and tenors. The majority of the time its due to improper breathing, too much velocity causing the voice to top out at a certain point, making you leap to a different positioning to continue, and possibly from doing a song in a key that highlights where your troublesome transitions are. Could relate to a few other things as well. If you can speak it on pitch, you can sing it. All singing, speaking and screaming are functions of the same thing. If you can do one, you can do the others.
3.I live in Los Angeles and New Orleans. I also teach, but less often out of the Boston area.
I do online sessions allot actually. Ive worked with people in quite a few regions and gotten good results. My rates can be found under the vocal training and online session section of my site - Extremevocals.com or just drop me a line at
info@extremevocals.com. If you email, mention that you spoke directly to me, so my assistant will forward it to me to handle myself. Ill look forward to talking with you about your singing.
Wow, this turned out to be quite a chunk! I hope I got to everyone, and covered some new ground for those reading. Ill try and get the second Q&A up ASAP.
Thanks again for the welcome, Im enjoying the discussion.