During
the Vocal Anatomy for Voice Professionals course in January
there was a query about falsetto. It began a very interesting
discussion between the co-tutors (Tom and Sara Harris) and the Vocal
Process directors (Jeremy and Gillyanne). It ended with Sara giving
a live demonstration of falsetto, modal and breathy modal voice in
the female voice. We felt it was so good that we have asked Sara's
permission to include the recording on the Vocal Process website.
Here's the question that started it all off:
Question: “I’m under the impression that when you’re using
falsetto that the cords are not actually touching.”
Sara: They can be.
Tom: You talk to a countertenor who is definitely using
falsetto and they’re making enough noise to fill a cathedral!
Sara: Their folds are definitely touching.
Jeremy: Can I just step in here? What we tend to cover in the
Singing and the Actor Training is the primary colours. So our
primary colour for falsetto is a really hooty, breathy,
things-don’t-meet-they’re-just-waving-gently-in-the-breeze thing.
But these are on a continuum. In fact if I’ve understood this right,
they are on two continuums.
Sara: Absolutely, that’s what we’re saying
Jeremy: They’re on two different continuums. You have a
continuum which starts at thick folds [modal or chest voice], and
they are vibrating in a particular way. Those folds can get thinner
but still vibrate in that particular way. And then you have the
other continuum which is falsetto where the folds are vibrating in a
different way, and they can get thicker, even though they are
vibrating still in that particular way, and those two can overlap.
And in fact they can overlap in pitch as well, so you can do the
same note in different qualities.
Sara: Yes, absolutely
Jeremy: So you can have a falsetto-type movement with thicker
folds that touch
Sara: Yes. And of course it depends on the [vocal fold]
closure
Tom: And for me, it’s not how much they touch, but because of
thinness and thickness and pressure and all that stuff, what
actually changes for me is the phase relationship of the
oscillation.
Gillyanne: So it’s the way they vibrate.
Jeremy: And it is also why when we are dealing with students,
sometimes they get confused. I had this the day before
yesterday. I had a male client in and I said “that’s not falsetto”.
He was singing what we would call a light head voice, but not in
falsetto, and he was really confused about that because he said “But
that’s not strong…”
Gillyanne: “…therefore it must be falsetto…”
Jeremy: “…therefore it must be falsetto”. And I said “no,
it’s not a falsetto type sound.”
Sara: We get it in speaking too.
Jeremy: So you can overlap either way.
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Sara then gives a really clear demonstration moving between
falsetto, thin folds, thicker folds at the same pitch, thicker folds
at a lower pitch, and a breathy version at the lower pitch, then a
very low-pitched falsetto. Sara has kindly given us permission to
put the sound file of her demonstration onto the Vocal
Process website, and as an eZINE reader you are the first to hear
it!
Click
here to listen to Sara Harris demonstrating falsetto in female
spoken voice.