Summary: During singing lessons, finding a mix between the head voice and the chest voice provides a strong sound without harming the vocal cords. Find a good voice mix with tips from a professional singer in this free video on vocal technique.
Jeanette Herrera loves to use her hands. She has been doing hair for more than 20 years. Herrera demonstrates step-by-step two simple French braids on her daughter, Alexa. Follow along...read more
"So we are talking about different techniques. Your head, voice, your belt, your chest, all those things. Now I would like to talk to you about your mix. Your mix is right up here. Try to imagine it right up here so it is not just your head voice. It is not just ooo but it is somewhere right in between and your ooo, ooo. You see the difference. Head chest, head chest. Your mix is going to be right in between there. So you're ooo, it is right in between so go do that with me ooo. So if I say rescue me. Sometimes you'll hear Christina Aguilera and you will hear some of these other pop artists go really high and you say wow I can't belt that high. They're not belting a lot of times. A lot of times they are using what is called their mix. So you have got to work on that and work on getting something in between there. Let me see what I can see, what you want. I can't belt up, what you want, baby I got it. I'm going to hurt my voice if I constantly sing like that so I have got to find my mix to be able to hit those notes, hit them well and then not get sick or hurt my vocal chords. So what you want, baby I got it. It is really airy. What you need, you know I got it, all I'm asking is for a little respect, when you get home, yea baby, when you get home, mister. So that's my mix and I'm not belting all that and I'm not hurting my voice and it's very light. It is in between your head and your chest and you have got to find that na, na, na, na, na, na, na. Do that with me, na, na, na, na, na, na. Find that mix."