The question I never want to hear: “What’s your vocal range?” 🤐

(THREAD)

It seems like a straightforward question, a responsible question, the question you SHOULD ask your singer before you start writing their piece.

But here’s the thing: I’m afraid to tell composers my range
The reason I’m afraid to share about my range is because of what usually happens next: A composer will inevitably sit at a piano and map out my range and assume that every note in my range is equally available.

The truth is: It’s not.
If you’re only thinking about range, you run the risk of…

Sitting on a note or set of notes in an extreme high or low range for a long time—this is demanding and can be uncomfortable!

Sitting on a note or set of notes in a transition point (passaggio)--also uncomfortable!
Moving back and forth between vocal extremes: the very topmost and very bottommost notes in my range, without realizing how this impacts my ability to sing those notes well.

Putting a word or set of words on a set of notes that are too high to make them intelligible AND in tune
👉Here’s a better way to ask the question:

“Can we take 10 minutes and will you walk me through your voice: the range, the transition points, your favorite and least favorite notes to sing?”
When you do this:

🎵You’ll build trust with a singer--you’ve just told them that you know not every note is equal and you’re on their team.
🎵You’ll write a piece that lets your singer shine by maximizing the notes they LOVE to sing on the VOWELS and CONSONANTS that work best on those notes.

🎵You’ll get repeat performances of your piece because your singer feels SO GREAT singing it!
🎵You’ll build a reputation as a vocal composer--a composer who understands the interaction between range, tessitura, and text--leading to more performances, score sales, and COMMISSIONS!
🌟Are you ready to dig in and GET SERIOUS about writing for singers?

👉Join me at my FREE 3-Day Training: Text Setting Like a Boss, Feb 2-4!

Link: https://mailchi.mp/8d454adcbde8/free-training-text-setting-like-a-boss
You can follow @LisaNeher.
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