Voice Training Sinhala | Voice exercises | Daily Singing Exercises | Vocal Training | Episode 2

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#Voice #training #sinhala #voice_training_for_beginners
Voice training sinhala
සංගීත සහ වාද්‍ය නිපුන් ගාන්ධර්වවේදී කලාශූරී සිසිර කාලිංග ඒකනායක.
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071 52 93 674
Sangeetha Nipun Sisira Kalinga Ekanayaka
No 141/1
Tempal RD
Maharagama
071 52 93 674
Voice Training Sinhala | Voice exercises | Daily Singing Exercises | Vocal Training | Episode 1
• Voice Training Sinhala...
Voice training sinhala | Singing Lessons | Sinhala Voice Training Lessons
• Voice training sinhala...
Voice Training සිංහල | Singing Lessons | Sinhala Voice Training Lessons
• Voice Training සිංහල |...
Voice training sinhala | Singing Lessons | Sinhala Voice Training Lessons
• Voice training sinhala...
Voice Training Sinhala | ඇත්තටම සංගීත විශාරද උපාධිය ගන්නේ කොහෝමද ? | visharad exam | Music Classes
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vocal warm-up
Physical whole-body warm-ups help prepare a singer or actor's body in many ways. Muscles all over the body are used when singing/acting. Stretching helps to activate and prepare the large muscle groups that take care of balance and posture, and the smaller muscle groups that are directly involved with breathing and facial articulation. Stretches of the abdomen, back, neck, and shoulders are important to avoid tension, which influences the sound of the voice through constriction of the larynx and/or breathing muscles. Actors (including opera singers or musical theatre performers) may need to do a more comprehensive physical warm-up if their role is demanding physically.
Preparing the breath involves not only stretching the many muscles involved with respiration, but preparing them to sustain exhalation during long singing/speaking passages. Specific training of the respiratory muscles is required for singers to take very quick deep breath and sustain their exhalation over many bars of music. A good vocal warm-up should include exercises such as inhaling for 4 counts, then exhaling for 8 counts (and slowly transitioning until the performer can inhale for 1 count and exhale for as long as possible); panting or puffing air are also used to engage in the intercostal muscles.
Vocal articulation is controlled by a variety of tissues, muscles, and structures (place of articulation), but can be basically understood as the effects of the lips, the teeth, and the tip of the tongue. Often we also try and use our jaw for articulation, which creates unnecessary tension in the facial muscles and tongue. A good vocal warm up will relax the jaw, while activating the lips and the tongue in a variety of exercises to stretch the muscles and prepare for the more defined vocal articulation that is required when singing or acting. These exercises may include tongue twisters, or the famous "me, may, ma, moh, moo" that many actors are seen doing in film.
Resonators are the hard and soft surfaces within the oral cavity that affect the sound waves produced during phonation. Hard surfaces, such as the hard palate, cannot be controlled by the singer, but soft surfaces, such as the soft palate, can be trained to change the timbre of the sound. A vocal warm up should include exercises which direct sound towards these hard and soft surfaces - these exercises can incorporate a variety of sound effects, including whoops, wails, and nasal sounds. Other exercises can help singers/actors be aware of lifting the soft palate, which can create a darker richer timbre when singing - an example would be simulating a sudden shocked gasp, and then maintaining the openness at the back of the mouth.
Changing pitch undoubtedly stretches the vocal muscles,[3] and singing or projecting one's voice for acting requires a more strenuous use of these muscles. A good vocal warm-up should move the singer/actor from the spoken register (small pitch range, small dynamic range, colloquial diction) into the singing register (large pitch range, large dynamic range, and diction specific to the demands of the role or piece). This is often the largest and most complex part of the vocal warm-up, and requires a multitude of exercises. These exercises also provide voice training, and are sometimes called vocalises. These activities teach breath control, diction, blending, and balance. A vocalise /voʊkəˈliːz/ is a vocal exercise (often one suitable for performance) without words, which is sung on one or more vowel sounds.[4]
Finally, a good vocal warm-up should prepare the specific material that is going to be rehearsed or performed (usually a vocal warm-up is a precursor to either rehearsal or performance). This could be as simple as doing some exercises in the key that is to be sung, or with the accent that an actor must use for their role. Certain difficult passages of the forthcoming repertoire might be broken down and used as an exercise,

Пікірлер: 24

  • @nadeeramadhusanka2114
    @nadeeramadhusanka21142 жыл бұрын

    මිහිපිට පහල වූ ලයාන්විතම ගුරැ පියාණන් දීර්ඝායු මගෙ සර් බුදුසරණයි ...❤️

  • @akilaasiri2635
    @akilaasiri26352 жыл бұрын

    අපේ රටෙ හරි යමන් KZread Voice Training පාඩම් හරී අඩුයි, ඒකත් Classical Voice Training. එහෙම එකේ මෙම KZread Channel එක සහ සර් එකතු වෙල කරන මේ දේ මම බොහෝ සේ අගය කරනව. ❤️❤️❤️

  • @kalpajayaruwan3587
    @kalpajayaruwan35872 жыл бұрын

    මෙම වැඩසටහන .මිල කරන්න බැරි තරම් වටිනව ඔබ දෙපලටම ගොඩාක් පි. තවත් විඩියෝ කරන්න .බුදු සරණයි

  • @thilinisadamali291
    @thilinisadamali2912 жыл бұрын

    ගොඩක් පින් ඔබ තුමන්ලට🙏🙏🙏මේ වැඩ සටහන දිගටම කරගෙන යන්න....🙏🙏

  • @ll0ydjayamanna88
    @ll0ydjayamanna88 Жыл бұрын

    ගූru තුමා හරියටම කියල දෙනවා godak pin prassna අහන මල්ලි best ona කරන තැන් හාරla.අහනවා දක්ෂයි වැදගත්

  • @anomidesilva7045
    @anomidesilva70452 ай бұрын

    Excellent explanation

  • @dinumifonseka7566
    @dinumifonseka75662 жыл бұрын

    බොහොම ස්තුති sir 🙏❤

  • @user-sn8zi9mv2v
    @user-sn8zi9mv2v6 ай бұрын

    Thankyou sir.. ❤️❤️❤️

  • @slapemusic1989
    @slapemusic1989 Жыл бұрын

    ගොඩක් හොද වැඩක්.. සර්.. ස්තුතියි...

  • @amarapathirage3969
    @amarapathirage39692 жыл бұрын

    ප්‍රයෝජනවත් වැඩසටහනක්

  • @shirantv8994
    @shirantv8994Ай бұрын

    ❤❤

  • @manelkumarihamid6962
    @manelkumarihamid6962 Жыл бұрын

    Guru piyaneni obathumat godk pin

  • @erandi7058
    @erandi70582 жыл бұрын

    Watina wada satahanak.. palaweni video Wath baluwa.. digatama wada satahana karanna sir. Bohoma sthuthi sir 🙏💐

  • @yehansamalish4371
    @yehansamalish43712 жыл бұрын

    Keep it 😱❤

  • @thanujlasantha835
    @thanujlasantha8352 жыл бұрын

    Thank you sir

  • @yehansamalish4371
    @yehansamalish43712 жыл бұрын

    Thank you❤

  • @malaniemaldeni4033
    @malaniemaldeni40332 жыл бұрын

    සුභ වේවා!

  • @sandarekasiriwardana5857
    @sandarekasiriwardana58572 жыл бұрын

    Thank u sir

  • @pathmagurusinghe4832
    @pathmagurusinghe4832 Жыл бұрын

    Sir, organ ekak miladee ganimata, sudusu vidiya upadeshayak labaa denna.

  • @y.channel3891
    @y.channel38912 жыл бұрын

    ❤️❤️මාත් ඉගන ගන්නෝ ❤️

  • @sachiniravihari7732
    @sachiniravihari77322 жыл бұрын

    ♥️♥️♥️

  • @Music-my3de
    @Music-my3de2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you sir ♥️

  • @hewagesuranga8167
    @hewagesuranga81672 жыл бұрын

    Thanks you sir

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