Are there any experienced singers who can help me with my head voice? I can sing up to about F#-G in chest voice before my voice starts cracking, and I only really strain above that point (depending on the day). But whenever I try to sing in falsetto at a normal volume it makes my throat hurt. No, I don't just get tired, it actively hurts my throat. I try to keep everything except the register the same, but head voice inevitably hurts. I also can't sing above like E3 in chest voice quietly without straining, and I want quiet practice for my intonation. Advice?
Yup, you are doing it wrong. You need to move your resonances as you move up in pitch. This is where I learned to fix that:https://m.youtube.com/channel/UCXncrpgDAX620BkKFc5ZJ5gLots of great free content there. Take the time to go through it. He has or had a paid course with exercises that I bought. Daily exercises help. I used to do them in the car while driving. Do it.
>>129887527Obviously I'm doing it wrong.>You need to move your resonances as you move up in pitchSo I need an entirely new approach for head voice? How can I tell what that is?
>>129887554>How can I tell what that is?Follow the link. If you have to use the search feature do it. I can't explain this shit on a Peruvian basket weaving forum. Go watch the guy.Simple thing. Say out loud: "This is what I'm going to do." Extend the ooo in do. Notice it resonates more in your cgest area. Now say out loud, " Where are you going to be?" Extend the eee on be. Notice it should resonate more in your nasal region. If you didn't do these out loud you are wasting both of our time. Take the eee and sing it in your low chest voice and try to bring it up in pitch without moving the resonance point up. Now sing that eee higher by singing it thin up in your nose. "nee nee nee" might be a good self demonstration. This is only an example I can't explain any better. There are different areas in your chest, throat and nasal cavities where you move resonance as the pitch goes up and down. You can manipulate your kouth and vowel sounds to make a full tone from top to bottom. GO LOOK AT THE FUCKING LINK.
>>129887527>Thing>Frog thing
>>129887721The link is a whole channel
>>129887290It doesn't make any sense your voice hurt when singing in falsetto/head voice. It's just your 2nd register. It should sound normal. Usually for men their passaggio is around E4(some people call it E3, so we are probably refering to the same note since E3 is a very low note to your voice strain). Anyway, don't fear the crack. Sing with it and try to make your falsetto stronger to eventually avoid it
>>129887752>The link is a whole channelAre you rarted? Do you think one little trick is going to make a a superstar singer? I'm not sitting in the same room as you. I don't know exactly what you are doing. I'm not a singing coach. I only know what helped me... and it took me a lot of searching to find it.... and a lot of work to get better at singing. I should have never responded to a dumb frog poster.
>>129887839No, it's E3. I can sing E4 in chest voice but only at full volume