There's a million different ways to learn how to sing - especially online.
There's more courses out there than you can poke a stick at.
There's classical teachers, rock guys, gurus who love to tell you just how great they are...
There's cry, edge, twang, open throat, placement, masque, vowel modification, compression BLAH BLAH BLAH.
Learning how to sing is total shitshow for all of the above reasons and more.
Singing itself is actually a very simple process.
But learning HOW to do it is about the most confusing thing you're ever going to find - and that's why you're here asking exactly HOW do you learn to sing well?
And while many people are going to throw complicated terms at you, and say things like "appoggio is key!" or "my course is the only one that works!" or "you have to sing with compression!" - leaving you with even MORE questions than you started with, and the feeling of being sold to and marketed to every five minutes.
All without being shown anything about actually singing.
It's a frustrating game, learning how to sing - that's for sure.
But I'm about to make it a billion times easier for you.
Not with some expensive course, or some fancy term, or some marketing BS.
A goal.
A super SIMPLE goal.
Connecting chest and head voice.
You might be thinking "hang on - but I've got two different voices, not one?" or even "dude, that's not possible".
But, it's actually the fundamental that all great singing is built from.
And there's a little more to it than you're probably aware.
Now when we talk registers like Chest and Head voice, we're really talking about two things.
The first being the tonal centre of your resonance, and the second being your musculature - the TA and CT muscles in particular.
Chest voice occurs when you contract the TA muscles - the thyroarytenoid muscles. Now, these muscles actually contract the vocal folds themselves, making them short and fat, kindof like a thick square. This thicker coordination creates body and thickness both physically and in a resonant sense too - creating your low range or "chest voice".
Head voice occurs when you contract the CT muscles - the cricothyroid. Now, these muscles and cartilage are actually located underneath the larynx. When you use these muscles, the vocal folds become stretched and thin - like stretching an elastic band. This thinner, longer coordination allows your folds to vibrate faster to sing high notes with ease.
You might not be aware of it just yet, but these muscles actually have what is called an 'antagonistic' relationship - meaning that they actually work against each other in the centre of your voice.
So, that point where you're currently yelling as high as you can is caused by excess contraction of the TA muscles, and no contraction of the CT muscles.
And that weak flip into falsetto is created by excess contraction of the CT muscles, and no contraction of the TA muscles.
The key to all great singing is actually to use BOTH of these muscles in the centre of your voice.
I've put together a tutorial specifically showing you exactly how to connect chest and head voice using the TA and CT muscles, just hit this link; How to connect chest voice [in 5 minutes]
Now, even more important than that - I've put together a special blueprint for your voice that actually shows you EVERYTHING you'll ever need to know about singing.
I'm serious.
You'll learn about the TA and CT muscles, vowel modification, placement, tonality - an instruction manual for your voice if you like.
And best of all, it's free.
Watch the video below, and then add your details underneath to get your free Vocal Blueprint that will show you exactly HOW to get started singing today.