Don't Think Twice, Its All Right (Bob Dylan)

I've been working on voice recently, and I think I figured something out that really makes it more enjoyable.  I have a nasal speaking voice, so reasonably I also have a nasal singing voice.  I started looking on YouTube to find out more about it, and this excellent linguist really opened my eyes to a lot of stuff - and I think I'm understanding it. 

You got:
 - larynx (voice box) contains the vocal folds
 - pharynx (chamber behind your mouth and nasal cavity; leads down to the esophagus (food) and trachea (air)
 - nasal cavity - giant space behind your nose
 - mouth

When a pitch is activated within an acoustic chamber, there are sympathetic frequencies that also resonate resulting in a full series of notes (although they are difficult to hear individually) which thereby create a very rich and unique combined sound - if you want to try it, you can sing or just yell into a guitar's acoustic hole and you'll get all the strings shaking just by the power of the fundamental note coming out of your voice.  Inversely, a synthesizer creating a SIN wave is literally a single pitch without this series of overtones - cleverly named "the overtone series".  Going in the other direction, a singer singing in a concert hall is actually a rich 'combined note' then activating the overtones in the hall which makes the sound completely new and rich all over again!  Get it?  A single note is actually not just one frequency ringing - its a fundamental pitch (the loudest / one you hear) accompanied by a bunch of other higher notes ringing together (though weaker but adding lots of flavor).  Its the shape, material, and method of transmission to the acoustic chamber that creates different sounding instruments, or noises, or any sound really.  By the way I'm just making all this up.

Lets get back to your mouth.  When you sing or speak, the shape of your mouth will amplify some of those sympathetic frequencies (they're called partials or overtones) and will negate others - your tongue is the most active participant in this process.  When you say words like "Aw" or "Oh", the jaws open and your tongue stays low down resulting in lots of space in your mouth for resonance - extend the lips and you get an even 'deeper' / 'richer' tone because you're literally making the chamber slightly bigger.  When you say words like 'she' or 'is' the jaws can stay closed and the tongue rises which results in relatively less space in the mouth for resonance - this results in a disproportionate amount of air being sent to the nasal cavity, which has a completely different design with respect to the amplification / negation of those overtones.  I believe both the mouth and nasal cavity (or oropharynx and nasopharynx) are used in singing, but use of one more than the other results in a noticeable change.

Its a funny compromise, when you speak or sing nasally: the sound is crisp, focused, and the words are understandable - perhaps this is why country / folk music around the world adopts a more nasal sound where people would sing / dance outdoors and didn't have access to performance halls - assuming there wasn't a church or cathedral nearby.  However the sound can be fatiguing to the ear, tend to go flat, and can be taxing on the voice as you are flexing muscles to forcibly direct a majority of sound to the nose.  Meanwhile the sound that utilizes the mouth is generally more pleasing to the ear, can have a greater range of tone for dramatic effect, and is less of a strain across long periods of singing - but it can be difficult to understand the text being sung, and is challenging to learn because we don't need to manage the jaws and tongue nearly as much for basic conversation. 

The reason why the mouth technique is much more pleasing to the ear and stays in tune more easily is because more of those overtones are being amplified when the mouth is used vs. the nasal cavity.  In fact, the acoustic chambers in your face are actually just filters of those sympathetic frequencies - and your nasal cavity eliminates a lot of them.  The trick is to get those nasal sounding vowels and consonants back in the mouth - words like 'me' 'neighbor' and 'this' have to be actively directed to stay in the mouth.  Words like 'law' or 'volume' are easier because the tongue is already down, and the vowel requires your jaws to be open.  Try closing your jaws on law and it becomes 'luh' - or just try saying law all the way to a closed mouth hum, and the only place the sound can come out is the nose.  So inversely, to sing 'me' you gotta try to imagine the word 'meh' coming out, and the result should be more open jaws and the tongue out of the way to create a nice balanced sound between the oropharynx and nasopharynx.  At least I think so...


Ishida