it means you have a sour voice from yelling or singing
You probably mean Angel Taylor but in my opinion she sounds more like Natasha Bedingfield. Not the same genre music but the same singing voice
Sounds like maybe you mean Paul Mc Cartney !?
Are you going for the terms hymnody and psalmody? Oh. I bet you mean chant.
I presume you mean the lyrics, or the words that the singer sings. Google either the song title or 'lyrics' and you will come up with many different links. I think you mean "acapella". This is when you have just the singing and no backing track.
improvisation
How loud or quiet your voice is. :)
You probably mean Angel Taylor but in my opinion she sounds more like Natasha Bedingfield. Not the same genre music but the same singing voice
Sounds like maybe you mean Paul Mc Cartney !?
Totally! I mean Allison Stoner couldn't sing and now she's on iTunes! If you want to try to improve your singing voice by yourself try finding a simple song and practice singing to it. I recommend starting with Naturally by Selena Gomez and after that try Our Song by Taylor Swift.
Sounds like one voice
when she says that it means that your voice horrible it sounds like it got stuck in a sword.
it basically means using your voice in it. for example people say "go do a vocal warm up" when they say that they mean go practice your voice. i hoped this helped you.
Are you going for the terms hymnody and psalmody? Oh. I bet you mean chant.
"Soprano", plural "Sopranos", if you mean the highest singing voice of a woman or young boy.
It is a compliment. It means that it is beautiful sounding. Probably good for singing.
If you mean that your singing is too quiet in regards to the rest of the music, that's something that can be fixed with good studio engineering. Don't just turn your voice up - use EQ to drop the volume of persistent background instruments (like rhythm guitar) when they run into the same frequencies you find in your voice. This will make your voice sound a lot sharper. If you mean that your voice sounds too low, what you have to understand is that you're hearing your own voice reverberating through your head, which acts as a soundbox (to hear what your skull is adding to the sound of your voice, plug your ears with your fingers and then talk/sing). Your voice will always sound much better in your own head than it will to a microphone. This is a sad reality of life. The only thing you can really do is practice singing with a microphone until you learn the technique of making yourself sound good. Each brand and model of microphone responds differently to different people's voices - you may sound gorgeous with one and horrific with others, so experiment with different types. You do say in your question that it's when you sing 'with your band', not necessarily recording. It could be a psychological issue. The best way to sort this out is by using a microphone hooked up to a good amp, pointed at you - you can also run it through an effects unit to give your voice more reverb. If whatever noise comes out of your mouth sounds like the voice of an angel, you'll naturally relax into your performance and perhaps your voice will sound high again.
I presume you mean the lyrics, or the words that the singer sings. Google either the song title or 'lyrics' and you will come up with many different links. I think you mean "acapella". This is when you have just the singing and no backing track.