I would love to see a tutorial about tips for maximizing "unusual" voices, like men who sing more in the alto or higher range and women who sing in the tenor or lower range. There is a serious lack of info out there for those whose voices don't fall within the norms. Thanks!
@@daltonshaneburton I'm a woman who is very comfortable singing in chest voice below low C, and I've literally found nothing helpful for how to use my voice, other than saying that women can't technically be called tenors, so I must be a contralto, which I'm not because my range is lower.
@@GarageStudio7 I think I'm technically a contralto profundo, which is the female equivalent of a tenor. As far as sounding androgynous, I'm not sure. I have an app on my phone called voice pitch analyzer and when I follow the instructions and read their text in my speaking voice, it recognizes my voice as being male based on the pitch/frequency. What are your thoughts?
This is THE BEST video I’ve seen on harmonies. This is exactly how I learned to harmonize from a very young age in Ensembles and Choirs and eventually it allowed me to apply to recordings, bands, and worship teams. This is such a simple way to train your ear!
I would love to see more on this because when I am trying to do harmony I totally find myself singing with the person I am trying to harmonize with which totally defeats what I am trying do. Its like I lose where I am suppose be and end up back with the melody of the singer. hope that made sense.
More of these please! Harmony is the most intimidating for me (...from childhood choir trauma, I won't bore you w/details)...I love your tips on the topic...keep'em coming!
@@swrv_sounds It's mostly a joke. But I do recall being a kid singing the wrong note and being put on blast by the choir director or fellow singer...ouch, quite embarassing!
@Tara Simon Studios I am a HUGE fan of harmony. Even as a child, I was able to hear, and pick out harmonies. It was just something that came to me naturally. Now, many years later, my voice coach really appreciates that fact.
I love harmonizing with the radio. Don't usually do crunchy chords, though I might start trying to do that. I sing in a church choir (2nd alto) and we have done some lovely stuff with crunchy chords.
I love these tutorials. It would be great to hear this with the microphones, and each panned differently. I am a "garage band" or self taught, musician this would be helpful... but maybe just to me!. :)
I too am a harmony freak. To the point that multiple coworkers over the years have mentioned it lol funny enough I couldn't actually harmonize until I was 14 or 15 when an amazing choir friend from school taught me with Whiskey Lullaby. Ever since I just love the variety harmonies give. I'm also lucky enough to have a decent sized range so I can make my way through all kinds of harmonies in a single song.
I really enjoyed this tutorial. A GREAT example of harmony and dissonance is Run To You by Pentatonix. The dissonance in Avi's bass is really breathtaking and incredibly difficult.
Thank you for sharing these tips! I sing in choirs for a long time but never made harmonies myself, including middle parts, but am getting into harmonization now. It is a lot of fun and very exciting!
I've mastered singing on 5ths using only my ear right after I hear the melody. I really relate to Tara because I also find the 3rd the hardest because it doesn't fit anywhere in my ear 😂 it's like hearing a different perspective if you know what I'm saying.. root and 5ths are easy (idk why coz of my ear) and 3rd are the hardest because they don't really line up with the actual melody if I'm making sense
I love harmonizing, I use to not be able to pick out a harmony or stay on a harmony, with practice and ear training ive been able to do so, although its still difficult at time depending the song it all comes down to practice
Ya, in this case it would be a sus2 (suspended 2nd), where a major chord which is usually a 1st 3rd and 5th becomes a 2nd 3rd and 5th, which will want to resolve to a 1st 3rd 5th
@@rohanphilip491 Yea that does exist, but the one she's demonstrating is the sus4(suspended 4th), where she sings the third, move up a half step to the fourth, and back to the third...(tip: you can try playing it yourself to hear)
I can't read music, I have to learn it all by ear. When in rehearsal I record my alto parts then go away and learn it by listening constantly or whenever I'm able. It works for me. My problem is if I don't have a fellow alto with me, I can't pitch my first note and end up coming in about four notes late. So I have to practice practice practice. I really enjoyed singing along with you guys. Great harmonies.
When I was singing in Choir, 52 years ago and Younger, my MIND and EAR practiced so many Baritone Harmonies that I could harmonize with late Bro. NOW, with SOLO singing with Rock and Blue Grass Bands, I have to PRE-HEAR my harmony and my band mate co-Lead Singer is frustrated with me NOT singing harmonies with her in her Lead Songs. It is embarrassing because she has a natural EAR for the 3rd.
This video really put harmonizing into context! Thanks you guys. It'll really help mine and my siblings' harmony improve! A suggestion on a Tutorial would definitely have to be ear-training! I'd really love to know how I can better take apart harmonies!
ok but you didn't teach me how to pick out harmonies in a song. All I learned was how to harmonize on aG chord. I'd like to learn how to harmonize in any song not on just one chord
I am too. my example (and typical application) is during Sunday morning singing (with no music in front of me). The people who are able to sing on worship team just "pick a part" to sing. I don't know how to sing anything other than melody with maybe a harmony note stuck in there every once in a while. Even if I manage to find a 5th or 3rd, i know harmonies don't just sing the melody line simply as a 3rd up. This exercise though is good for ear training. I should challenge myself by trying to sing the 3rd, cause I really couldn't hear it well.
If you have a piano, try to figure out, which harmony the song has. It's mostly the first and last tone you can hear in the song (instrument or text). If you get this, you need to figure out if it's moll or dur (I don't know how it's called in English). OR listen to the instruments in the background it's mostly the 'second voice', which you can use to sing as the second voice
I good way to do it is to look up a harmony for a song, or try and listen to it in a song. Also listening to the melody really helps. Once you get the melody down in a song, try singing higher or lower than the main singer(melody). Practice helps a LOT! I was able to train my ear, and I can do it pretty well now.
This was an awesome start for me because I used to sing soprano in my younger days but now in my sixties I have to sing alto. I realize this video is 3 or more yrs old but I hope I find more of your lessons.
Nice lesson Tara👏The challenge I am having is trying to find my 'real' voice without actually trying to strain my throat or trying to sing like the artist in the song I may be listening to!!
I am new to harmonizing. I have been called to worship and have been singing my whole life but know diddily squat about music. Harmonizing in alto. I am new to music noted what certain words mean etc.
What's also cool is to get a really good harmony line, perform it dozens of time, and then try to sing lead. Ouch! Yes, ear training! I'd been singing harmony in the car for five decades, when my two band mates (both singers) heard me singing harmony to a song we did they forced me to buy a microphone! Three years later I'm singing lead a fifth of the time, and harmony on probably well over half of our other songs. It gives us a nice edge over other bands in the area!!! Being a basso profundo (A1-E4ish) makes it interesting, too!
Heeyyyy, tara!!! Would love to see a tutorial on how to make acapella arrangements!!! Or if that's too hard, could you do a tutorial all about ear training?? Specifically for those people who LOVE to sing but cant get the notes right, but KNOW they're doing it wrong. Would be SUPER thankfull if you take any of these suggestions! (Or both! Hehe!😘)
This is a fantastic Lesson. I am able to pick out a harmony interval and I am trying to learn ONE part of the many harmonies of Hotel Cal with my band here in Oregon. HARD to pick out THANKS for this 1/3/5 lesson. GREAT STUFF.
Omg i had sooo much fun singing along! I miss being in a choir!! More more more!!! Would love and appreciate if you Posted songs and teach the harmony parts🎉❤
wonderful! dear tara....It would be helpful to hear you do your "crunchy" sequence alone, up thru the modulations, so we could practice locking onto the 1/2 step changes (I think they were 1/2 steps). and then do it with all 3 voices. this is sooooo helpful! thank you!
As children my family would sing Jackson Five songs, thinking we were harmonizing. Not. My brother is the guy who would start with the lead and switch to backup somewhere in the middle. 😂 And I, the younger, had to adjust to his switching. This lead me to loving harmony groups like Take Six. Good stuff, subscribed.
My mother taught my sister and I to sing in harmony when we were very young. I perfected my harmony on "You are my sunshine" when sung in a key that I could handle. I try to apply the same tactics to other songs but fall short of the mark which exasperates me. I search for songs sung in a key that I can handle but different singers usually sing in a key that is right for them so I can't seem to get in harmony with them. I found this video and learned some basic features that I feel will help me but I need many lessons.
I’m so glad this video helped you overcome some of your challenges. We coach worldwide and would love to help you the rest of the way. If interested, just email info@tarasimonstudios.com or call 404-437-7919
Thank you for sharing and teaching! This is so helpful. I help sing at church and am not that great. Your videos are really encouraging and helpful. My pastor and his wife used to make big bucks when they were in a band back in the day. I want to help compliment them and didn’t know how to know who to sing with or match and now I understand. Thank you to much
I think something that may be helpful to the learning vocalist is not just the standard harmonies based upon 1/3/5, but also delve a little into stylistic choices you might see (hear) in differing genres of music. For example, the 3/5/7 that can be heard in traditional gospel music...or some of the crunchiness you spoke of, Tara, in pop music from people who grew up with these other traditions. Also, while you did not point it out, approach to vowel is key in singing, but CRITICAL in harmony. A right pitch can sound very wrong if the vowels and consonants aren't in agreement.
I really enjoyed this interactive format where I can pick to sing with one of you and follow along. I always struggle finding my note when I am the 1 or the 3.... especially the 1. So I decided to match with Jeremie and it really helped me focus on my note in context to the others. :D
Even though I'm not a singer, I'm really having fun watching your tutorials! Also, in case you read this, can you please see and react to Lea Salonga and Cyd Pangca singing True Colors together? Thank you so much!
Okay this was awesome👌I loved this👏one thing I always was shakey about was separating the positions into 3 parts: the lead and the two harmonies with the upper and the lower but now that you guys do it too makes me feel a lot more comfortable haha because I always thought I was wrong for doing that🙌🏽 9:36 and WHAT🔥My ears just melted😣❤❤
I'm a flautist/recorder player who's recently started doing a lot of singing in a choir that does lots of sightreading, and switched to alto for assorted reasons. I have no trouble hearing the top and singing the top line. But figuring out my starting note on alto, and sightreading as an alto is much harder than soprano, especially since we don't have a choral scholar the way the sopranos do. So I'm trying to train my ear to hear the middle line in 4 part harmony well enough to figure out the starting note and line without having to hear someone else sing it correctly. It's more of a challenge than I thought it would be - with flute or recorder I put my fingers down correctly and blow the right intensity, and I get the right note but that's not the case with singing. And because of all the years playing flute and piccolo my ear automatically goes to the top note. I need more ear training, and more practice singing alto lines in a choral setting. However, I'm getting quite the crash course, and I can tell I've improved quite a lot in the few weeks I've been singing alto. I'm still mostly getting by on lots of practicing pieces at home, but that should ease off too. So I came here looking for ear training in harmony singing.
Outstanding video! Thank you so much! I had such a hard time trying to understand harmonies. Before I could mostly understan octaves. You have helped so much in my music theory understanding. Much appreciated!
Want Lessons? Vocal Courses? More? Check Out Everything Here: linktr.ee/tarasimonstudios
This is just so lovely and joyful- and I actually learned(!) something in the brief few minutes I watched. Thank you so much! You are a gift!
When listening to a song I'm the person who tries to sing all the parts at once! Lol
Me too 😂 I sound like a mess when I do, but it's really fun
Same!
omg I do this in garageband too hahaha :)
Same Matthew, same💜
that's what they call ambition!! ;P
That harmony in the beginning. 👌🏼👌🏼👌🏼
i find harmonies really hard to do without already hearing it first
Very true
Same with me😒
I find harmonies really hard because I can't sing.
Same
Same :(
She said pentatonix my heart
And Voctave 😭
I would love to see a tutorial about tips for maximizing "unusual" voices, like men who sing more in the alto or higher range and women who sing in the tenor or lower range. There is a serious lack of info out there for those whose voices don't fall within the norms. Thanks!
AGREED! I'm comfy anywhere between F2 and B6 and there's just no info for how to use that. Like what do you do with that?
@@daltonshaneburton I'm a woman who is very comfortable singing in chest voice below low C, and I've literally found nothing helpful for how to use my voice, other than saying that women can't technically be called tenors, so I must be a contralto, which I'm not because my range is lower.
MN Girl my range is also lower than contralto and I sound better than some men in tenor because of the fullness of my lower range
@@MNGirl Definitely a Contralto though. With Vocal Fach, that's where you would fall. Do you have an Androgynous sound?
@@GarageStudio7 I think I'm technically a contralto profundo, which is the female equivalent of a tenor. As far as sounding androgynous, I'm not sure. I have an app on my phone called voice pitch analyzer and when I follow the instructions and read their text in my speaking voice, it recognizes my voice as being male based on the pitch/frequency. What are your thoughts?
This is THE BEST video I’ve seen on harmonies. This is exactly how I learned to harmonize from a very young age in Ensembles and Choirs and eventually it allowed me to apply to recordings, bands, and worship teams. This is such a simple way to train your ear!
practicing harmonies ^^
1st harmony : 5:40
2nd harmony (w/ dissonance) : 9:20
I would love to see more on this because when I am trying to do harmony I totally find myself singing with the person I am trying to harmonize with which totally defeats what I am trying do. Its like I lose where I am suppose be and end up back with the melody of the singer. hope that made sense.
Absolutely the same that i do!
Yeah it's easier to sing in unison
i absolutely understand that. i can hear the harmony in some songs but i always go back to singing the melody too.
Same!!
Same is my problem
More of these please! Harmony is the most intimidating for me (...from childhood choir trauma, I won't bore you w/details)...I love your tips on the topic...keep'em coming!
what trauma?
@@swrv_sounds It's mostly a joke. But I do recall being a kid singing the wrong note and being put on blast by the choir director or fellow singer...ouch, quite embarassing!
@@joycalories That must be, you did improve no?
@@swrv_sounds I got Tara Simon's Course & Yes now I know HOW to sing...Tara teaches how the singing mechanism works...
@@joycalories If it made you feel bad it's not a joke I'd say. But that's the spirit! Don't let people put you down, learn and improve!
Learning harmony makes you a better lead vocalist.
@Tara Simon Studios I am a HUGE fan of harmony. Even as a child, I was able to hear, and pick out harmonies. It was just something that came to me naturally. Now, many years later, my voice coach really appreciates that fact.
no one:
me practicing harmony: uwu
Omg that's the cutest harmony 😆
What about OwO
Whenever I heard harmony, Pentatonix comes to my mind. I'm too addictedddd
I think harmonies are so beautiful, but it’s so hard for me to sing and hear! More tutorials on ear training and harmonies please! 🎶❤️
i am struggling so hard
Yes I would play songs over and over doing each part of the harmonies, it really helps you as a singer.
A brilliant yet easy lesson on 3 part harmonies....
And sprinkled some dissonance on top! That was awesome! 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
I love harmonizing with the radio. Don't usually do crunchy chords, though I might start trying to do that. I sing in a church choir (2nd alto) and we have done some lovely stuff with crunchy chords.
I love these tutorials. It would be great to hear this with the microphones, and each panned differently. I am a "garage band" or self taught, musician this would be helpful... but maybe just to me!. :)
I too am a harmony freak. To the point that multiple coworkers over the years have mentioned it lol funny enough I couldn't actually harmonize until I was 14 or 15 when an amazing choir friend from school taught me with Whiskey Lullaby. Ever since I just love the variety harmonies give. I'm also lucky enough to have a decent sized range so I can make my way through all kinds of harmonies in a single song.
I really enjoyed this tutorial. A GREAT example of harmony and dissonance is Run To You by Pentatonix. The dissonance in Avi's bass is really breathtaking and incredibly difficult.
I'm a tenor singer and this video really helps newbies to parting and harmonies
Thank you for sharing these tips! I sing in choirs for a long time but never made harmonies myself, including middle parts, but am getting into harmonization now. It is a lot of fun and very exciting!
She's the only singing coach that covers everything
I can do easily an octave harmony to the melody of a song but the struggle comes when I try to do a fifth harmony or a third harmony:(
Welcome to my world ;)
Tara belts notes off the bat, it takes me like three tries to get a note right, I can't even sing but I just love watching them 😭
😂 put some dirt in your eyes
@@JamesBrown-ji3yd HAHAHHA
I've mastered singing on 5ths using only my ear right after I hear the melody. I really relate to Tara because I also find the 3rd the hardest because it doesn't fit anywhere in my ear 😂 it's like hearing a different perspective if you know what I'm saying.. root and 5ths are easy (idk why coz of my ear) and 3rd are the hardest because they don't really line up with the actual melody if I'm making sense
I love harmonizing, I use to not be able to pick out a harmony or stay on a harmony, with practice and ear training ive been able to do so, although its still difficult at time depending the song it all comes down to practice
Yes !! You guys are fire !!! This is the best harmony tutorial I've ever found.
Thanks it was useful
I want more videos on harmony
Lol, Noted!
8:56 they are called "sustained chords", where the third degree (the third) of a major chord goes up a half step (a semitone)
Ya, in this case it would be a sus2 (suspended 2nd), where a major chord which is usually a 1st 3rd and 5th becomes a 2nd 3rd and 5th, which will want to resolve to a 1st 3rd 5th
@@rohanphilip491 Yea that does exist, but the one she's demonstrating is the sus4(suspended 4th), where she sings the third, move up a half step to the fourth, and back to the third...(tip: you can try playing it yourself to hear)
@@romariosawyers5553 oh ya you right, my b, thanks for the correction
@@rohanphilip491 Yeaa aii
@@rohanphilip491 sus2 is actually 1st, 2nd and 5th though...
Awesome!
I love harmony and don't often find other harmony singers - so I have to admit i was major 7th ing along with you all and it was a blast!
I can't read music, I have to learn it all by ear. When in rehearsal I record my alto parts then go away and learn it by listening constantly or whenever I'm able. It works for me. My problem is if I don't have a fellow alto with me, I can't pitch my first note and end up coming in about four notes late. So I have to practice practice practice. I really enjoyed singing along with you guys. Great harmonies.
The dissonants made me fall in love🤩 i want to do that
Thanks Tara breaking down the harmonies and explaining about the 1, 3, 5. I learned something new today!
When I was singing in Choir, 52 years ago and Younger, my MIND and EAR practiced so many Baritone Harmonies that I could harmonize with late Bro. NOW, with SOLO singing with Rock and Blue Grass Bands, I have to PRE-HEAR my harmony and my band mate co-Lead Singer is frustrated with me NOT singing harmonies with her in her Lead Songs. It is embarrassing because she has a natural EAR for the 3rd.
I love you all and your teachings, you've made me understood how melodies are sung
Awesome!
Being able to sing harmony is so important as a singer when it comes to working in groups or even getting studio session gigs! Great Lesson!
This was so helpful! Thank you! I sing on our music ministry team. I sing harmonies and always learning and growing!
This video really put harmonizing into context! Thanks you guys. It'll really help mine and my siblings' harmony improve! A suggestion on a Tutorial would definitely have to be ear-training! I'd really love to know how I can better take apart harmonies!
ok but you didn't teach me how to pick out harmonies in a song. All I learned was how to harmonize on aG chord. I'd like to learn how to harmonize in any song not on just one chord
I am too. my example (and typical application) is during Sunday morning singing (with no music in front of me). The people who are able to sing on worship team just "pick a part" to sing. I don't know how to sing anything other than melody with maybe a harmony note stuck in there every once in a while. Even if I manage to find a 5th or 3rd, i know harmonies don't just sing the melody line simply as a 3rd up. This exercise though is good for ear training. I should challenge myself by trying to sing the 3rd, cause I really couldn't hear it well.
If you have a piano, try to figure out, which harmony the song has. It's mostly the first and last tone you can hear in the song (instrument or text). If you get this, you need to figure out if it's moll or dur (I don't know how it's called in English). OR listen to the instruments in the background it's mostly the 'second voice', which you can use to sing as the second voice
I good way to do it is to look up a harmony for a song, or try and listen to it in a song. Also listening to the melody really helps. Once you get the melody down in a song, try singing higher or lower than the main singer(melody). Practice helps a LOT! I was able to train my ear, and I can do it pretty well now.
iiNyxx you can just switch it to another major chord. Like C major the 1-3-5 notes would be C-E-G. You need to know music theory.
Smh
Pentatonix is magical!! Yaaas!! 😍
This was an awesome start for me because I used to sing soprano in my younger days but now in my sixties I have to sing alto. I realize this video is 3 or more yrs old but I hope I find more of your lessons.
Nice lesson Tara👏The challenge I am having is trying to find my 'real' voice without actually trying to strain my throat or trying to sing like the artist in the song I may be listening to!!
This was so useful! I hope you expand on this more 💙
Please do a video on ear training 🥺🥺🥺
I am new to harmonizing. I have been called to worship and have been singing my whole life but know diddily squat about music. Harmonizing in alto. I am new to music noted what certain words mean etc.
❤❤❤
What's also cool is to get a really good harmony line, perform it dozens of time, and then try to sing lead. Ouch!
Yes, ear training! I'd been singing harmony in the car for five decades, when my two band mates (both singers) heard me singing harmony to a song we did they forced me to buy a microphone! Three years later I'm singing lead a fifth of the time, and harmony on probably well over half of our other songs. It gives us a nice edge over other bands in the area!!!
Being a basso profundo (A1-E4ish) makes it interesting, too!
Heeyyyy, tara!!!
Would love to see a tutorial on how to make acapella arrangements!!!
Or if that's too hard, could you do a tutorial all about ear training?? Specifically for those people who LOVE to sing but cant get the notes right, but KNOW they're doing it wrong.
Would be SUPER thankfull if you take any of these suggestions! (Or both! Hehe!😘)
This is a fantastic Lesson. I am able to pick out a harmony interval and I am trying to learn ONE part of the many harmonies of Hotel Cal with my band here in Oregon. HARD to pick out THANKS for this 1/3/5 lesson. GREAT STUFF.
Omg i had sooo much fun singing along! I miss being in a choir!! More more more!!!
Would love and appreciate if you Posted songs and teach the harmony parts🎉❤
What a simple demonstration straight to the point I like it.
This takes me back to all of my choir days
Great tutorial, very helpful. Im learning so much from your videos. You're my number one voice coach.
Here I am tryin' to make a 7th harmony 😅😜
That was so so useful! I’m in choir so it was pretty easy to understand but I feel like I understand it a lot more
LOVE crunchy chords and harmony , period!!!
♫ Oo wah oo wah
Oo-oo-oo-oo wah
Oo wah oo wah
Why do fools fall in love♫
You're a little flat on that last note
Wow, this is amazing real..!!
wonderful! dear tara....It would be helpful to hear you do your "crunchy" sequence alone, up thru the modulations, so we could practice locking onto the 1/2 step changes (I think they were 1/2 steps). and then do it with all 3 voices. this is sooooo helpful! thank you!
That video helped me a lot but I think I have to practice those crunchy harmonies many times until I can do it. Thank you so much
I love harmonies they add so much to a song.
As children my family would sing Jackson Five songs, thinking we were harmonizing. Not. My brother is the guy who would start with the lead and switch to backup somewhere in the middle. 😂 And I, the younger, had to adjust to his switching. This lead me to loving harmony groups like Take Six. Good stuff, subscribed.
Everyone on the bus was staring at me
My mother taught my sister and I to sing in harmony when we were very young. I perfected my harmony on "You are my sunshine" when sung in a key that I could handle. I try to apply the same tactics to other songs but fall short of the mark which exasperates me. I search for songs sung in a key that I can handle but different singers usually sing in a key that is right for them so I can't seem to get in harmony with them. I found this video and learned some basic features that I feel will help me but I need many lessons.
I’m so glad this video helped you overcome some of your challenges. We coach worldwide and would love to help you the rest of the way. If interested, just email info@tarasimonstudios.com or call 404-437-7919
Just a nice bunch of people at Tara Simon Studios. You can tell that they all get along, like each other, and love what they do.
people look so nice and charming in this channel, especially tara!! i love this video and i learn a lot from it thank you so much!!!
Thank you for sharing and teaching! This is so helpful. I help sing at church and am not that great. Your videos are really encouraging and helpful. My pastor and his wife used to make big bucks when they were in a band back in the day. I want to help compliment them and didn’t know how to know who to sing with or match and now I understand. Thank you to much
I think something that may be helpful to the learning vocalist is not just the standard harmonies based upon 1/3/5, but also delve a little into stylistic choices you might see (hear) in differing genres of music. For example, the 3/5/7 that can be heard in traditional gospel music...or some of the crunchiness you spoke of, Tara, in pop music from people who grew up with these other traditions. Also, while you did not point it out, approach to vowel is key in singing, but CRITICAL in harmony. A right pitch can sound very wrong if the vowels and consonants aren't in agreement.
Wow! Its crystal about the singing in harmony. I really enjoyed the crunch of melody. You guys are supereb.
Definitely straight forward and helpful
I’m so happy you made one of these!
Tara has beautiful voice...perfect for Broadway!
Thank u love! I actually did Broadway before God steered me into the coaching world.
Found this in my recommendations. Is TH-cam trying to tell me something?
😂😂
YT trying to tell you to practice your singing cause you sound horrible while singing in Karaoke😂
@@candyy478 lol
Hi friends, this is very important to me as a worship leader. Thanks guys this is great. You've helped me big.
this video/tutorial is amazing
Oh,thank you guys! I'm so excited for what I have learned today..all I can say is,,,music is LIFE!! Keep sharing your talent.and God bless you.
Tara ,you are beautiful as well as your voice ❤❤❤
Thank you love
My voice went straight to the 3rd. I stayed with her the whole time
Coach Niki has beautiful eyes OMG and what a smile.
I really enjoyed this interactive format where I can pick to sing with one of you and follow along. I always struggle finding my note when I am the 1 or the 3.... especially the 1. So I decided to match with Jeremie and it really helped me focus on my note in context to the others. :D
Yes! Someone finally explains this in a way I can understand! Thank you! Subscribed!
This is one of the best explanations ever.
Yaaay! I’m so glad it helped!
Even though I'm not a singer, I'm really having fun watching your tutorials! Also, in case you read this, can you please see and react to Lea Salonga and Cyd Pangca singing True Colors together? Thank you so much!
Thank you for this. Harmonies are always my go to as well but this is helpful to know the differences between them! Please keep them coming!
Love this!! Can you talk about flat vs sharp and tips on how to avoid it while singing?
I was singing the bass part when you guys sang.
I love and live for harmonies! :)
Use of major and minor cords, for instance in setting a mood in a song. Jim Hester
Okay this was awesome👌I loved this👏one thing I always was shakey about was separating the positions into 3 parts: the lead and the two harmonies with the upper and the lower but now that you guys do it too makes me feel a lot more comfortable haha because I always thought I was wrong for doing that🙌🏽
9:36 and WHAT🔥My ears just melted😣❤❤
They explained pretty well and I am practising now, too.
Same here! I love singing in harmony than solo or lead. 😉
I'm a flautist/recorder player who's recently started doing a lot of singing in a choir that does lots of sightreading, and switched to alto for assorted reasons. I have no trouble hearing the top and singing the top line. But figuring out my starting note on alto, and sightreading as an alto is much harder than soprano, especially since we don't have a choral scholar the way the sopranos do. So I'm trying to train my ear to hear the middle line in 4 part harmony well enough to figure out the starting note and line without having to hear someone else sing it correctly. It's more of a challenge than I thought it would be - with flute or recorder I put my fingers down correctly and blow the right intensity, and I get the right note but that's not the case with singing. And because of all the years playing flute and piccolo my ear automatically goes to the top note.
I need more ear training, and more practice singing alto lines in a choral setting. However, I'm getting quite the crash course, and I can tell I've improved quite a lot in the few weeks I've been singing alto. I'm still mostly getting by on lots of practicing pieces at home, but that should ease off too. So I came here looking for ear training in harmony singing.
This was extremely, super helpful. I can do lead all day but harmony is a little bit challenging. Thank you for making this video 🎼🎤❤️
Thank you. Harmony is my melody.
I really enjoyed this one and would enjoy seeing more tutorials about harmonies.
Outstanding video! Thank you so much! I had such a hard time trying to understand harmonies. Before I could mostly understan octaves. You have helped so much in my music theory understanding. Much appreciated!
Amazing vocal coach xx
I would love to see you doing a reaction of Little Mix - PAPER penthouse or Acapella Queens, and hear their harmonies!!! Love your channel!
I felt the harmony lacked some bass support so I sang the octave below Jeremy. I feel cool. Love the video, thanks!
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