Since you're pushing more air to hit the higher notes, it's normal to get louder too. On the other hand, it's difficult to sing low notes with much volume. A vocal coach can help you learn to compensate for this, partly by teaching you to sing from the diaphragm instead of by expanding and collapsing the chest cavity.
Well I don't know if you can get it higher but this MIGHT work in a REALLY high voice say clearly nine, ninty-nine, nine hundred and ninty-nine, Then repeat in in a VERY low voice. And again in your normal voice. Your voice will change maybe it'll get higher. Try it then try singing. :)
In singing, you have ranges called your Chest Voice and your Falsetto. When you use your chest voice you are singing in a comfortable range and you have a lot of power behind it...It isn't very airy. When you use your falsetto, you are singing a note that is in the higher range of a scale. Your tone is very air filled. It comes out quietly and airilly. :) hope that answers your question.
try singing in a fan or beating your chest while singing trust me it works
When you sing from your stomach or rather your diaphragm, the sound is usually stronger and your chest doesn't hurt as much. Usually you do that when singing a long phrase or loudly so you don't run out of breath. When you sing from your throat...actually, I don't think your supposed to sing from your throat unless you're singing quietly; because you sing with your "head voice" to keep the high notes in pitch, and you sing with your diaphragm to have more....control, power,whatever you want to call it.
Yes, a singing voice contains many registers, using your upper and lower chest are two different things and when you speak your diaphragm is not used to produce the sound normally. a standard singing voice will also range between Upper, lower chest, falsetto, head voice and vocal fry. And the lucky few can use whistle register (Youtube Mariah Carey whistle register)
Well I don't know if you can get it higher but this MIGHT work in a REALLY high voice say clearly nine, ninty-nine, nine hundred and ninty-nine, Then repeat in in a VERY low voice. And again in your normal voice. Your voice will change maybe it'll get higher. Try it then try singing. :)
In singing, you have ranges called your Chest Voice and your Falsetto. When you use your chest voice you are singing in a comfortable range and you have a lot of power behind it...It isn't very airy. When you use your falsetto, you are singing a note that is in the higher range of a scale. Your tone is very air filled. It comes out quietly and airilly. :) hope that answers your question.
I'm a professional classical baritone and I can tell you that is completely normal to have your falsetto range extend beyond your chest voice.
try singing in a fan or beating your chest while singing trust me it works
Yes, it is very normal to have shooting chest pains after having a heartburn.
Generally, all chest freezers are larger than normal freezers although you are able to purchase some chest freezers which are smaller than normal freezers.
Puerile breathing is the characteristic bronchial-like breath sound that is heard when you listen to a child's chest with a stethoscope. Normal breath sounds in adults are vesicular, and a bronchial breath sound might signify a lung pathology. But it is thought to be normal in children because they have a thin chest wall compared to adults, which magnifies the breath sound all the way from the trachea, making it louder and more bronchial.
normal in 10% of population
yeah, it's normal.
no it is not natural for him to do that.
usually when you sing through your nose it sounds very nasal. or some tests you can try is singing a song and if you are not breathing when you are singing notes you are doing it through your nose and feel your chest when you sing if it vibrates you are singing the right way
When you sing from your stomach or rather your diaphragm, the sound is usually stronger and your chest doesn't hurt as much. Usually you do that when singing a long phrase or loudly so you don't run out of breath. When you sing from your throat...actually, I don't think your supposed to sing from your throat unless you're singing quietly; because you sing with your "head voice" to keep the high notes in pitch, and you sing with your diaphragm to have more....control, power,whatever you want to call it.