Vocal Freedom PDF
Vocal Freedom PDF
Remember: Keep your body well aligned. Good posture is essential to good voice
use. Breathe out slowly on a gentle ffffff sound.
Your notes
Your notes
Bend arms at the elbow as if you were holding ski poles. Bend knees. Bring arms up
so that your wrists are near the ears. Push off as with ski poles and allow the body to
relax forward, bending at the waist and knees, with the end position of the head near the
knees and elbows back. Push off with ski poles, slightly straighten legs and with poles,
swing arms forward and stand up. Repeat.
Your notes
[Start with sketch at far left.] Stand with feet hip distance
apart. Allow yourself to slump from the waist, as limp as a ragdoll,
letting the knees bend slightly until the fingertips touch the floor
(or as far as you can). Keep the shoulders and neck released.
Slowly roll up to a standing position, feeling each vertebra move on
top of the one below it (similar to building a tower of wooden
blocks). Leave the neck and head until last, then build those
vertebrae.
Your notes
Stretch the back intercostals - Cross arms over the chest so that hands gently
cup the opposing shoulder. With the knees slightly bent, drop from the waist so that the
head is near the kneecaps. Breathe in and out in the bent over position, focusing on the
muscles in the lower rib cage. Drop the arms and slowly come to standing.
Your notes
Your notes
Release the abdominals. Stand with feet widely apart. Bend knees fully, keeping the
spine in a vertical position. Place hands flat on your lower belly (around and below the navel
and just inside the hip bones). Bend the knees a little more. Inhale. Feel the natural relaxation of the abdominal muscles? To test this, try to tighten these muscle under your
hands and note how difficult it is to take in a full breath.
Your notes
Fully expand all airspaces. Lie on the back, knees pointing toward the ceiling, legs
hip-width apart. Just as an infant waves his/her feet in the air, allow your feet to dangle
freely. As you are lying there, breathe in deeply to feel all the bodys pockets fill with
air. Slowly release the out-breath.
Your breath is now warmed up and ready to go. Throughout your teaching day, think
about how you use your breath. Do you tend to keep speaking even if you are almost out
of air? One option is to get into a habit in speaking in short sentences. Unlike the actor
who follows a prescribed script, teachers may elect to divide their communication into
shorter and more manageable breath loads.
As you become more fully aware of coordinating your muscles to take in adequate air
and as you become attuned to matching your vocalization to your breath, you may
notice that your body begins to make these adjustments automatically.
Your notes
Pharynx. A nice way to open up the pharyngeal area (the wall behind the uvula) is to
practice a few fake yawns. Imagine your air tube orginating from the air source (lungs)
and out the mouth. This tube makes a curve at the pharynx, but does not collapse.
Soft palate. To get the muscles of the soft palate going, breathe, drop the lower jaw,
keep the tongue tip behind the bottom teeth and say ah. Then add ng (as the last
sound in hung), to make a connected chanting sound, ah ng Repeat. Do you feel a
buzzing in the top of the mouth or floor of the nose?
Your notes
Your notes