English · Tips

5 Reasons Why You Should Make Singing A Habit

Man singing in to microphone
via freerangestock

Singing isn’t just for a cappella enthusiasts and aspiring YouTube musicians. Did you know that belting a few tunes several times a week actually improves your well-being?  Here are five reasons to start harmonizing today:

  1. Starting is a snap

Unlike most introductions into the world of music, singing requires no equipment – no instruments, no instrument cases, no instrument cleaning solution – you get the idea. All you need is yourself. You don’t even need a vocal coach to start singing. Sing in the shower, in the car, at karaoke with your friends. If you need some motivation, joining a choir is a great first step. Go online and check for music groups in your area. Chances are, there will be multiple choirs to choose from. Want some free instruction? YouTube is your one-stop shop for singing tutorials, including tips on how to read music, breathing techniques, songs for beginners, and more.

  1. Singing is a workout

You may not be running, but your body does work hard when you sing. Choirs and vocal coaches often take special care to emphasise proper breathing techniques. Singing is an aerobic activity, which means that it’s good for your lungs and heart. Holding notes helps increase your lung capacity, which means you’ll be less winded in other physical activities. A healthy heart lowers your risk of heart disease, high cholesterol, and cardiovascular disease. Though there isn’t much movement involved, many singers compare the feeling of singing to yoga, only without the sweat and complex contortions. If you want to attempt both simultaneously, Los Angeles has started a vocal yoga trend. Are you up to the challenge?

  1. Sing Well, Feel Better

Singing doesn’t stop at physical benefits. With your heart rate up and your lungs working hard, your body releases stress and produces endorphins, those feel-good hormones that elevate your mood. Singing by yourself is well and good, but if you sing with others your emotional health benefits tenfold. Singing with a group develops a sense of community, of belonging. The group dynamic goes even further, as researchers in Sweden discovered that as people sing together, their heartbeats synchronize. How cool is that? Singing is even used as therapy for people with cancer, dementia, and stroke survivors. Next time you’re feeling down, sing a few happy tunes to feel more upbeat.

  1. Build Confidence, Note by Note

Did you know that singing could help you lessen your fear of public speaking? When you sing, your body releases a hormone called oxytocin, which helps alleviate stress and anxiety. Oxytocin also increases feelings of trust, which bolsters confidence in not only yourself but in those around you. Now this isn’t to say that people who sing never get nervous. But the more you perform an activity, the more the activity’s actions become habit. Just as your body responds to your nerves before singing, your body will mimic that response when you’re confronted with public speaking. Soon you’ll find that speaking in front of an audience isn’t as terrifying as you originally thought.

  1. Expand your mind

Not only is your voice the most portable instrument out there, it is also the most versatile. Singing regularly opens your mind to new composers and musicians, new styles of sound, and consequently, to new ideas. Learning activities such as singing help create new neural pathways in your brain. These pathways allow you to process the world at a deeper level. If you find that you truly enjoy singing, perhaps you will try your hand at a career in the music or entertainment industry. You could work for a radio station, or a recording studio. If you also have a talent for languages, perhaps you could work for a subtitling company. Maybe you could even direct your own choir one day. The possibilities are endless.

Article by Amanda Clarke

English · Tips

Confession #2: How To Stay Motivated

Blog 2 image

It’s been said over and over and over again – Plan, plan, plan!  Planning is key for anything you want to achieve in life.  This is so, so true and although we know it’s true, we keep neglecting to do it! (myself included!)

I want to put a new spin on the planning concept though, because I think there are more benefits to be had than the obvious ones…

We all know that motivation starts with the vision.  Your motivation is at its peak and it gets the ball rolling.  “Yes, let’s do this!”  The absolute last thing you want to do is plan at this stage—  “I just want to get stuck in man! Time is ticking!”

But planning is THE key to maintaining that motivation throughout the project period.

Let me illustrate by way of example.  I have had my own home recording studio for a number of years now, and the problem I constantly fight, is the urge to want to get stuck into recording a song idea without first clearly laying out the song structure.

It’s so easy these days to make a track from nothing.  With the advent of MIDI, laying down a complex piano piece, synth or cool beat has never been easier.  But more likely than not, if you dived straight in, without concern for the overall structure and feel of the song you’re trying to create, you’re simply not gonna be happy with the final product.  This is because inevitably you get carried away with this cool riff here and that cool riff there that you eventually lose sight of the song.

Bear in mind, this is after hours and hours of work.  When you have spent the greater part of a weekend on a song and aren’t happy with the outcome this can only lead to demotivation.  Suddenly your dream of making a kick-ass song that got you so fired up in the beginning is now lost and you wallow in your sorrows for the next few days.

Guess what?  You’ve just wasted the greater part of a week sulking and not being productive.  Maybe you even re-visited your track with more time spent and more demotivating results.  This time could’ve been spentproductively in planning.

Planning of course will have proved fruitful in the tracking stage – if you know the song structure, you know which instruments to use and where to place them to create the feel you’re going for.  This hands-down beats trying every instrument in the book and every placement under the sun.  Better still, after the week or so spent planning and tracking, you now have a completed song that you’re proud of.  But that’s not the best part.

The best part comes as a result of effective planning, and as a result of a finished product you can be proud of:  continued motivation!  That same motivation you had at the start of the project you now have again because, well, you created something awesome!  You took the tools that you had, you thought about it proper and you applied it to make something great.  If anything its more motivating than the start! Instead of being a pipe dream, making a great song is now a reality and you now know you possess the power needed to do it again.

The same applies to any industry.  If you’re a painter you don’t just try every single colour in your palette and paint every single part of the canvass hoping for the best?  If you do, you’re going to make a complete mess.  Same goes for the business executive with a new initiative.  You don’t simply dive in because chances are, you’re not going to work effectively.  Mistakes will be made requiring you to put more time and money into the project than you really should have, simply because you didn’t plan properly.  A loss of time and/or money with no/sub-par results leads to… demotivation and even self-doubt!

Motivation is the driving force behind any project we set our minds to.  It’s what gets us up in the morning when it’s cold and dark outside. It’s what keeps us working whilst others are out and about partying or watching series.  It’s what makes us save and invest rather than go away on that summer holiday.  But fail to plan and you will waste time and money on an outcome that is less than desirable.  And guess what?  You’re gonna wishyou were in bed, out and about or on that summer vacation.  Because then at least you would’ve enjoyed yourself.

The lack of planning spells death to motivation and ultimately death to your project, goals, dreams and careers.

Keep the fires of motivation burning.  Never stop planning.

Sean David is a self-established music entrepreneur, singer/songwriter and journalist.  

English · Tips

The Student, the Craftsman and Case Studies about Being “Stuck”

Below are a few real life “case studies”. These are real people and real situations.

As a music pro, I use a similar approach to my work as I did in my time as a lecturer. The end result is a good product, but I also want to develop and help in the long run. I want to open doors for the artist. I have no interest in forcing an artist in a direction he/she does not enjoy.

Seeing a musician struggle is no joy for me and in these examples I wish the outcome had been different.

However, maybe these cases can help you – and may help explain why some very talented artists are stuck in first gear. Maybe these examples make you see that much of your career is determined by pen on paper writing.

Improvement Made Easy – Forgetting You Are an Artist:

The Student:

I was a full time lecturer for songwriting, composition and audio production. Students paid for my classes, so they were motivated to learn and listen and were open to new ideas for their music. The lecturer suggests homework and areas to study. After learning something new, a student often cannot wait to try it at home or apply it to something he is playing. The student is excited; he feels like he received a gift that will help his music.

You will notice progress and improvement comes easy and energy is high.

The Craftsman:

My composition professor taught that seeing yourself as a craftsman rather than as an artist is a healthier and more effective attitude. If someone wants a chair build to specific measurements, a carpenter builds it for him. If the carpenter has never worked with the desired wood, he might sit down with a test piece to get a feel for the material. Working with the desires of the customer leads to experience with a new wood, working in a different scale, a different style, etc… As a result, one notices that learning new techniques and experiences comes naturally.

For both the student and the craftsman outer stimuli can lead to growth. Both are still free to follow their personal ideas with their music or their personal woodwork, but both have more tools and techniques available to them than before the interaction.

Now imagine both situations with an artist (or a cliché of an artist).

The Artist:

A songwriter / producer / A&R suggests the same areas of study as the lecturer. The same changes and suggestions that were a gift that excited a student can feel like an intrusion to an artist. So instead of being thankful for a gift, studying it deeply and then seeing if it is possible to make it work, the artist simply rejects it. There may be a lucky break and a filmmaker hires the artist to record a very specific song for a specific scene that happens to fit his current style. Instead of going to the “woodshop” / library / taking lessons the artist writes what he always writes, “because he is who he is”.

You will notice that there is no progress, no improvement, no new technique and no new experience. The student and the craftsman will soon have a vast array of tools and techniques, while the artist is stuck.
Next, look-up “neuroplasticity” and make sure you are not stuck as an artist.

I have noticed that artists with a strong sports background are usually a joy to work with – simply because they are used to training and trying new techniques to improve their skills.

Case Studies

1: 1000 Gigs
Issues:

• Will not work with a co – songwriter
• No Sound B
• Trying to fix writing issues in post production
• Strategy determined by personal preference, not material / professional considerations

This is a great case of how ineffective it can be to rely entirely on your own songwriting / creative direction if you are not a professional songwriter.

I had a singer/songwriter referred to me who has played over a thousand college gigs. He was a good-looking guy with a great voice. He was very hard working and technically solid. He had been pitching and gigging extensively and seemed to be stuck at his current level for a number of years. His latest feedback: “Too AC” (AC is adult contemporary). He contacted me to produce him (as in record and mix not “produce produce”) and to give him a more modern, less AC sound, so that the A&R who made that comment could sign him.

Listening to his music, I heard a sweet voice and a sweet guitar, playing sweet chords with exactly the sweet arrangements one would expect in his genre. All the vocal lines were sweet and too safe. The issue was clearly not the recording and mixing – it was in the writing and performance. Everything was a little one-sided. There was no dissonance to balance all the sweetness. This artist had mastered “Sound A”, but he had no “Sound B”. Unfortunately, this meant that half way through the first song, most listeners (especially the college students he targeted) lost interest.

Not only did he not have a “Sound B”, his “Sound A” was for a much older audience. Like so many artists, he was too close to his material to notice these issues. He had also never worked with a professional songwriter, and so never experienced a more nuanced writing. He was willing to spend money on a new mix, but working on the actual songs was not an option he was willing to consider. A while later I listened to his new EP, which contained the same music he had been recording for the past ten years, with all the same issues. He will take it on the road to the same venues.

Case 2: A-List Hollywood Movie Licenses

Issues:
• Will not work with a co – songwriter
• Wrong sound for the voice (never worked with an “old-fashioned” producer)
This is a study of the importance of an “old-fashioned” producer who helps with the direction of the music or a co-writer who knows how to feature a voice. I recently met a singer who had put his band on hiatus after working very hard for ten years to put the band on the map. The band had recorded several CDs and, through personal relationships, was able to place a number of songs into Hollywood films with top talent.

Through hard work and this unique lucky break, this indie band was exposed to millions of listeners. To his shock and surprise, these listeners did not translate into sales, or fans, and the band failed to make any progress. While there was nothing wrong with their U2 / Coldplay–style music or their performance, in ten years, no one picked up on the one crucial detail holding the band back – the vocals did not fit the music. The voice is the focal point of any song, and the music should be written to make the vocalist shine.

While the singer wrote the songs himself, he wrote and arranged them to be sung by Bono or Chris Martin. His voice was different: smaller, more singer/ songwriter in style. Furthermore, the background vocals were not arranged to support him, nor did the band ever try a microphone shoot-out to find a more meaty vocal sound. So for ten years he worked very hard writing music that drowned his vocals. His best efforts and a one in a million connection were less of a factor than the issues in writing and
producing.

Case 3: Electronic Music Guy

Problem:
• Royalty obsessed
• No control over harmonies

A strange paradox exists in the professional music world. Professionals who actually make money through royalties often seem to get to reasonable agreements quickly. They also know that sharing royalties can work in their favor. The people who are the most unreasonable and over-protective about royalties are often people who never made any money or who are inexperienced. I am not saying to be careless, but the old line that 50% of something is better than 100% of nothing is very true.

I met a talented electronic music guy who regularly came up with catchy ideas. As he had no concept of harmony or how to structure a song with harmonies, his ideas never translated into great songs. Despite a million different sounds his songs usually ran out of steam long before the end. At the same time he was too much of a free spirit to buckle down and learn the songwriting craft. He enjoyed playing with sounds and coming up with vocal ideas. The easiest fix would have been to work with a co-songwriter to combine both strengths for great songs. In that scenario we could have knocked his album in shape in a couple of sessions. Especially since he wanted to produce himself, he would have only needed “pen on paper” work.

However, for him sharing royalties was unthinkable. Not an option. Not being able to write good songs, not willing to study harmony, he asked me to be his “project manager”. For a while he visited me once a week to play his songs to me. As instructed I gave him feedback and tried help him getting his material in shape, without touching it.

Thankful and excited about the points and the chance of progress he went home, where his limitations as a writer caught up with him. I’m sure you can imagine how frustrating that must be – stuck between knowing you cannot go all the way alone, but unable to share credit.

As I said earlier 50% of something is much better than 100% of nothing.

I hope this text helps you to avoid some of the usual pitfalls.

 Lars Deutsch