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  1. Apr 9, 2017 · There's an interesting site called The Range Place where it covers the voice range of an individual singer. There was a thread about Agnetha and Frida's voice range from that site, so I felt like this has to be shared due to my persistent interests in vocal ranges and types.

  2. Jan 17, 2022 · Engelhardt succeeded in bringing Abernathy’s voice to the fore in more ways than one: Abernathy, a non-professional musician, recorded the sung solo in The Listening, finding a place for her own...

    • Micah Hendler
    • Anna Kendrick (Beca Mitchell) By the time she sang her first note of “Cups (When I’m Gone)” as the rebellious Beca, Anna Kendrick was already a well-known name with multiple award nominations and a hit franchise in her repertoire.
    • Anna Camp (Aubrey Posen) Anna Camp projectile vomited her way onto the big screen as the uptight, stage fright-afflicted Bellas co-captain Aubrey. Her career began in New York theater through a pair of Off-Broadway shows followed by a costarring performance with Daniel Radcliffe in the Broadway revival of Equus.
    • Brittany Snow (Chloe Beale) Brittany Snow made her modeling debut at age 3, then as a teenager joined the CBS soap Guiding Light before spending three seasons on the NBC drama American Dreams.
    • Rebel Wilson (Patricia “Fat Amy” Hobart) Rebel Wilson first rose to prominence in her native Australia before bursting onto the world stage with a supporting turn in the Oscar-nominated comedy Bridesmaids (2011).
  3. Dec 18, 2020 · One of the single most tragic concepts in the entirety of The Simpsons is the fate of Eleanor Abernathy, an ambitious and bright young woman who ended up becoming the show's resident Crazy Cat Lady.

    • Freelance Writer
    • Overview
    • Maintaining a Singer’s Lifestyle
    • Controlling Your Breath
    • Exercising Your Voice

    Everyone is born with their own distinct singing voice, but you can actually improve yours by making some simple lifestyle changes and doing easy singing exercises. We’ve put together the ultimate guide for strengthening your singing voice to help you get started. Below we break down everything you need to know, like how to take care of your voice, breathe properly so you sing better, and do vocal exercises that will get your voice to its fullest potential.

    Drink plenty of water and rest on your off days to keep your throat healthy.

    Practicing breath control and exercising your diaphragm are great ways to improve your singing voice.

    Never skip your warmups before singing and practice regularly to ensure that you sing at the top of your game.

    You probably learned when you were young that your voice comes from your voice box, also called your larynx. The larynx contains muscles called “vocal folds” that are covered by a mucous membrane. For your vocal folds to vibrate properly and produce a clear voice, you must keep the mucous membrane hydrated. Systemic hydration means maintaining healthy hydration levels throughout the tissues of the body.

    Long-term hydration is far more important than short-term hydration, so chugging water the day before a performance will not help you

    Drink, at minimum, 8 glasses of pure water — not tea, not soft drinks — every day.

    Avoid dehydrating drink that contain alcohol and caffeine.

    Drink extra water to compensate for alcohol or caffeine if you drink them.

    Avoid all carbonated drinks, even uncaffeinated ones, if they give you reflux.

    The most important muscle to be aware of is your diaphragm, a dome-shaped muscle that stretches across the bottom of the rib cage. Contracting the diaphragm (inhaling) pushes down on the stomach and intestines to make room for air, and lowers air pressure in your chest, allowing you to take air into your lungs.

    To exhale, you can simply relax your diaphragm, which allows the air to leave your chest cavity at a natural rate, or you keep your diaphragm engaged against the stomach and intestines to control the rate of exhalation. The latter is very important for singing.

    Be aware of your breathing.

    To improve your breath control, you need to be completely in tune with the entrance and exit of air from your body.

    Find a quiet, distraction-free environment where you can sit for a few minutes every day and just focus on how inhaling and exhaling feels in your body.

    Practice pulling your breath down into your body.

    Do vocal warmups before singing.

    You wouldn’t start running before you stretched out, because you could strain and injure the muscles in your leg; the same principle applies to the muscles involved with singing. Before you put your vocal cords through the stress of some serious singing, you want to make sure you warm up your voice so you don’t strain it.

    Humming is a good way to ease into full-throated singing. Before you begin singing, practice some scales in a hum.

    Lip trilling warms up the muscles involved with exhalation to prepare them for the controlled breathing required by singing. Keeping your lips pressed together, push air through them to create the sound we associate with being cold: brrrrrrrrr!.

    Move through your scales in this manner.

    Although singing songs is your ultimate goal, you should practice every day on plain old scales. This will help you gain control of your voice, stay on target with pitch, and move more easily between both adjacent and disparate notes.

  4. Actor, Singing Actor, Soloist, Director, Music Director, Production Vocal Coach, Teaching Artist. Have worked with Philly area theatres such as The Walnut Street Theatre, Arden Theatre, Prince...

    • The Vocal Actor w/ Corbin Abernathy
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  6. Mar 6, 2014 · Singing Voice, Acting Voice, Acting for Stage, Film & TV, Dialects, Accent Reduction, Voice Over, as well as Public Speaking. As a Philadelphia Voice teacher and Acting teacher, I offer private coachings online or at my studio to maximize convenience for my students.

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