You've tried pushing, you've tried shouting, you've tried falsetto - but no matter how many different things you try to learn how to sing high notes, you're always just short of the finish line.
Not to mention getting through a full set of songs one after the next - it actually seems like those higher notes get HARDER the longer you're singing for, right?
That's because singing high notes is meant to be easy, effortless and powerful.
... but at the moment, they're hard, way too much effort and probably weak or strained.
The OPPOSITE of how your high range is meant to function.
What if I told you the solution was right in front of you, and it was something you can learn to do RIGHT NOW and won't take 10,000 hours of practice to perfect?
Let's break the voice down into the most basic elements of sound.
Your vocal folds vibrate at a speed - this speed of frequency is the 'pitch' that you're singing, right?
Now, the 'vowel' that you sing is ALSO a frequency (well, two frequencies to be exact), and this frequency is ALSO derived from how your vocal folds vibrate together.
Basically, your pitch is a direct result of vibration, and the sound that we hear is a derivative/integer/multiple/division of this frequency in the way we receive that sound without our vowel.
Meaning, if you sing the word "hey" in chest voice, this same vowel/word isn't going to work as you sing higher; you can try it now - it feels like at a certain point you either have to prioritise the pitch and you lose the quality of the word, or, you prioritise the word, and you can't really hit the pitch without pushing... or at all. Now, let's shift that slightly to EH, like "head" instead of "hey" as you ascend; if you get this right, the space in the back of the mouth/throat will shift and 'receive' this sound differently. It still makes the central vowel in the word "hey" if that's what you're singing, but the frequencies which make up this vowel have now changed.
So, if you want to sing high notes well, you first need to understand this relationship between vowel and pitch - and how the 'color' of your vowel needs to shift as you ascend to 'receive' the changing frequency that is generated by vibration of your vocal folds.
It's actually REALLY easy.
Here's how to get started;