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Stacking Skills for Success: Singing – Part Two

9/20/2022

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The basis of all vocal instruction at the elementary level as well as many times at the junior high level is modeling.

Modeling is what students hear and especially what they see that's necessary to produce a good vocal sound.

What's a good vocal sound?

A good vocal sound is what you hear when someone is  expressively singing in-tune notes that fall into the meat of their register.

They're not straining and they're not forcing notes that aren’t forthcoming in their voice.

Depending upon the genre, tonal quality will vary.

The tone must be appropriate for the setting.

If you’re singing death metal, you don’t want to sound as if you are singing a Puccinni aria, and visa versa.

For the bulk of these posts, I am focusing on developing good vocal habits and sound in elementary singers.

The Golden Hour: the First Time They Hear You Sing
From the very first class you have with students, the first notes you sing are crucially important.

Those notes will imprint upon your students exactly what you, the teacher, considers is an acceptable, good vocal sound.

Whenever I started at a new school, the students in the first class would usually start to giggle or laugh embarrassingly when I first started to sing.

The uncomfortable student feedback was probably because their previous music teacher didn't sing that much or didn't put any effort or thought into their own singing.

If you get this initial laughing reaction from students, don’t over-react or take it personally.

Full disclosure: Yes, I am presenting myself as an expert in teaching singing to little children. Yes, I’ve only taken class voice for one semester in college – no other studies.

On the other hand, I have spent decades singing and have made tens of thousands of dollars singing in hundreds of venues as well as on broadcast/cable TV and radio.

And according to my supervisors, co-teachers, parents, and superintendents, my classes and choruses always sounded great.

I’ve always had a background in singing in a variety of settings and I took my vocal responsibilities seriously, especially after I started fronting a band.

When I sing in a classroom without sound reinforcement, I sing to fill the room. It doesn’t matter the room. My voice will fill it.

Melody rules. Just ask a recording engineer or a sound mixer at a concert venue.

Once you start singing professionally, you come to a quick understanding that the first thing listeners react to is the groove and she second thing is the vocal melody.

As teachers, we need to respect this reality and teach accordingly.

Learning how to sing in elementary school starts in kindergarten.

I have observed over the years that children with good vocal technique and pitch always have an easier time when playing an instrument.

The older my class, the greater the chance that the students will laugh or giggle when they first heard me sing. The younger the kid, the more willing they were to accept that this is what singing sounds like.

With older kids, I would usually have to cut my first song short and dryly – but firmly - say, ”Okay, I know you're not used to hearing somebody really sing, but this is what it sounds like, and this is what it's going to sound like, and this is what you're going to sound like, so let's just get our giggles out of the way. This is what singing is about. And by the way, I don't like to be interrupted when I'm singing, so don't interrupt me again when I’m singing.”

What I was singing was probably the “Hello Song”, which is the first song I teach all of my classes.

I would start teaching the song while playing guitar. Guitar gave me the mobility to cruise the room while I sang. It also drove home the idea that I was not a captive of the piano – I could go wherever I wanted in the room at any time and continue to make music as well as manage student behavior.
Because the “Hello Song” is a call and answer song, modeling is inherent in the form of the piece.

I would also be singing full voice in the actual octave that the kids would be singing: from C4 to C5.

If I wanted the kids to actually model me, I knew that I had to initially sing the actual pitches they were singing.

If they were unable to match pitch with my voice, I would put down the guitar and move behind the piano.

After we were able to cement pitch in place, I could sing an octave lower, from C3 to C4.

Using a Piano for Singing
These were guidelines that worked for me when using a piano for singing with kids.

I used a digital grand piano on and X-brace stand going through a PA. The children would be sitting in rows in front of me.

It is crucial that clear sight lines be established between the teacher students.

I demanded eye contact at all times when we singing.

Sitting and singing behind an upright piano is hard to pull off. The upright becomes a wall between you and the class. The flat digital instrument is much more transparent and unobtrusive.

I never looked at my hands when I played. I ALWAYS maintained eye contact with each child in the class.

What I Was Always Looking For When Kids Sang
The first thing I looked for was that they looked like a mirror of me: the way I sat, the way my eyebrows and chin were slightly raised,

and the way my mouth looked as I sang.

It took several years of experimentation, editing, and data collection but I finally determined the five criteria that had the most impact on improving the singing of children.

I called these five requirements “Big Singing”.

No hands on face.
No screaming.
Open your mouth.
Move your lips.
Move your tongue.

I’ll explain in depth in another post why I chose these five.

By all means, do your own data collection. See what works for you. Come up with your own criteria.

The important idea is that you are giving kids a concise list of principles that’s easy to memorize, visualize, and conceptualize.
​
More on “Big Singing” and singing in “Stacking Skills for Success: Singing – Part Three”.
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Amazing

9/20/2022

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Before

9/18/2022

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Stacking Skills for Success: Singing – Part One

9/18/2022

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And now we get to the juicy, fun stuff!

Singing is a biggie!

It's probably the biggest biggie when teaching elementary general music. It's the skill and sound source for almost all the modeling of other sounds that kids will make with instruments or otherwise in your class.

Singing is the one musical thing that the youngest to the oldest adult can do and always feel successful about their efforts.

Singing can also be a target on each child's ego if they feel they aren't good enough.

A reaction of a callus teacher, a wayward grimace from a parent, an inappropriate laugh from a classmate, a maladroit complement from a principal, or just the every day insensitivity that the world can incessantly churn out can be the genesis for a child thinking they can't sing.

Most adults who tell me that they can't sing we're told they couldn’t sing when they had a single digit age and they have been playing that trope/tape over and over and over in their heads since their youngest years.

Before we examine the singing of our students, let's take a look at ourselves as musicians and educators.

Self-assessment
Do you sing?

Do you like to sing?

Are you any good at singing?

What have people told you about your singing?

Have you ever sung in public, either in a group or solo?

Have you ever sung into a microphone?

Have you ever had someone clap for your vocal performance after you sang?

Have you ever had anyone boo after you’ve sung?

Do you feel that singing is only for those who are really gifted in the skill?

Do you now have or have you ever had students who sang better than you?

Do you believe that you can get better at your singing?

Let's take a look at a couple of these queries.

Do you sing? Well, if you're a general music teacher in elementary or junior high, you better be able to sing.

Unfortunately, a lot of instrumental music majors end up getting elementary general music gigs and primarily focus on the instrumental aspects of teaching children music without embracing the concept that the child's voice is the first instrument they'll ever engage.

These teachers avoid singing or nonchalantly approach it like a natural skill or talent.

Do you like to sing? This is sort of a loaded question. I would hope you would love to sing.

I do.

I've always felt that the best elementary general music teachers I've ever observed exhibited a joy when they sang.

Therein lies the rub.

As someone who has sung professionally for decades, I've occasionally had to sing material that I really did not care for but I had to present it in a way that appeared that I loved it.

That is a skill that I did not have to use in school but sporadically had to on gigs.

If you don't like to sing or if you have hang-ups about your own singing right now, it's important to learn to appear like you're having fun while you're singing with your students.

The short reason for that is if you're not having fun, why should they?

And singing should be fun!

If you have issues with singing, it's best to work through them.

Accept your abilities where they are right now, no matter how weak a singer you think you are, and strive to get better.

Am I saying go get vocal lessons?

No, not necessarily.

If you are the person who is driven by a teacher/student paradigm, then sure, find a good vocal mentor or teacher.

But if you have a tendency to approach things like an autodidact, start being scientific about your sound and technique when you sing. Understand how your body works when it makes us a vocal sound.

Be able to think top down in your body and visualize what's going on with your sinuses, your nasal cavities, your mouth, your tongue, your throat, your lungs, and your stomach.

Just as an instrumentalist understands all the intricacies of their own personal instrument and how manipulating it can add nuance to intonation or sustain, as a singer, you must think about your voice as an instrument and understand it as such.

I've heard many music teachers say, “I can't stand the sound of my own voice.”

I hate to tell you this but I'm going to break the news to you right now.

Your voice is the only voice you have.

You can look at your voice as either a curse or a gift.

My advice is to approach it as the latter.

It's the voice that your parents gave you. As I grew older and into my thirties and forties, I came to realize that I could hear my father's voice in my voice, which sort of freaked me out at the time.

I was not expecting it.

I grew into the understanding of hearing that sound and came to see that it as one of the greatest gifts my parents gave me.

Are you any good at singing? Yes! You are great at it. I'm telling you this and I haven't even heard you sing. But I believe that if you hear the qualities you want to hear in your own voice as you sing then, yes, you are a good singer.

Has anyone told you anything about your singing? I hope you have been told that you sound great. But if you haven’t, know that those compliments are just a little bit down the road from where you are. They’re coming!

Fortunately, from my earliest years, negative criticism really never bothered me that much.

If you've heard or seen negative reactions after you've sung in the past, try and dust it off your shoulder.

You are a work in progress.
​
More on the importance of singing in “Stacking Skills for Success: Singing – Part Two”.
 
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Make a Choice

9/17/2022

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Don't Wait

9/15/2022

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Stacking Skills for Success: Why the First Three Count So Much.

9/15/2022

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Some of you might question why I put so much weight (let alone so many damn words) on the first three skills that I stack, namely listening, self-discipline, and proactive mindset.

If you’ve been my principal  . . .

If you’ve watched me teach . . .

If I taught your kids . . .

If you were my student . . .

If you’ve only read these posts and wonder “Who the hell is Holmes?”

The truth is that those first three components were crucial in allowing me to accomplish everything in the classroom and allow my students so much free reign to develop their individual talents.

Self-evaluation
First things first.

As educators, we have to take stock of ourselves before we even approach our students with these first three skills.

Where have we succeeded in our personal and professional lives?

What part did self-discipline, refine listening skills, and proactivity play in achieving our successes. If we are weak in any of those areas, how have our lack of success or forward movement been a result of not emphasizing the first three skills in our lives?

Trust me. I didn’t always get it right.

These aren't easy questions to ask and sometimes the answers are even harder to admit to.

But addressing them head on is the only path forward.

Embrace Success
The more successful we are in the arena of music, the more we are demonstrating to our students how we embraced self-discipline, listening, and pro action to get us to where we are today as musicians.

This is not to diminish all the hours our students play or sing by putting the spotlight on us.  It’s central, though, to create a visual and aural foundation exemplifying those three skills in a musical context so our students can have a take off perspective to invision their own musical path.

My demeanor of listening, self-discipline, and proactivity was always the key component of anything musical that I did in the classroom.

Prime the Pump: Suggest Questions
I learned early on that one of the most powerful questions I could ask any teacher or role model was “Can you show me one? Can you give me an example?” I coached my students to ask the same types of questions.

As a kid, I knew that if I could see it, hear it, mentally or physically ingest it, I'd have a much greater chance of replicating success and taking it to an even different place through my own hard work and interpretations.

“How did you compose that, Mr. Holmes?”

“How do you do that on the piano, Mr. Homes?”

“How are you able to strum that so fast on a guitar, Mr. Holmes?”

“How do you get your fingers to do that, Mr. Holmes?”

“How do I practice when I’m all by myself at home, Mr. Holmes?”

“Are you rich, Mr. Holmes? I know you are. How do I get rich?”

These are all questions I was asked by kids AFTER they were intrigued and curious by what they observed in our classroom.

And every answer I gave had an element of the first three stacking skills embedded in it.

Creating a World of Autodidacts
In other posts, I've talked about if I only had five or three or even just one class to teach, what would I teach.

I firmly believe that with the foundational three stacking skills, a groundwork will be secured where any musical skill can be fostered by the student on their own. Our purpose as a teacher is to mold individuals who thrive on what we have provided after they leave.

Observing these first three stacking skills (especially proactivity) in action with my mentors in my teen years was the reason I developed from a kid who barely got out of high school to a successful educator, composer, educator, and consultant with more than a handful of credits and awards in my back pocket.

The Closer
As educators, we need to present ourselves as musicians, not music teachers, and light a fire that no other educator ever could.

Once a child wants to play music, that desire will stay with them for the rest of their life whether they act on it or not. The fire might go down to embers but it always has the ability to roar right back.

The problem is that if our students don't have the listening skills, the self-discipline, and the proactive inclination to go back to music, the odds are slim that they will embrace the challenge.

When people hit a plateau with music or it's simply just gets too hard, it's the first three skills are the ones that will pull them through the slump.

It's these first three skills that will pave a road for success in just about anything they pursue in their lives.

If, as music educators, all we teach is music, we miss the point that music is only a part of life. It’s how music is connected within our lives by our ability to critically listen, self-modulate, and proactively preform that we are able to pull it all together.
​
And isn’t that what we want for our students?
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Heavenly Aspirations

9/13/2022

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Imagine

9/11/2022

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A New Song

9/10/2022

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    Boyd Holmes, the Writer
    musician, composer, educator, and consultant


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