Connect with us

Business

Celebrity Vocal Coach Micah Plissner

In Micah Plissner’s 25-year career as a vocal coach, his clients have included singers like
Sean “Diddy” Combs, the Katy Perry Band, Rufus Wainright or even television shows
such as American Idol and Glee.

Published

on

He talked with us from his home in Los Angeles to discuss important vocal tips, what impresses him as a coach and how to navigate the industry.
You can reach him or learn more at his website: https://micahprovocals.com/

TVM: Let’s go back to the beginning; when can you first remember being struck by a
vocalist? Who was your favourite as a child maybe?
MP
: That’s a great question! I grew up in New York City in the 60’s and everything that
was popular at that time was R&B, there was no rock. All you heard on the radio was The
Temptations, Marvin Gaye, Diana Ross, you know? So it was everybody in that genre.
You could almost take anybody that was popular in the early 60’s or mid 60’s who was in
R&B and they were blowing my mind.

TVM: So did you want to be a vocalist initially?
MP
: I wanted to be a singer as long as I can remember; I did my first gig when I was
three years old on stage you know? And it was in the papers; I’m from New York City so
you know it was like in Central Park. It was crazy, I was such a young child but I loved
being on stage.

TVM: When and how did you get into teaching it though?
MP
: I got into teaching because as I got older, especially in the late 70’s and early 80’s, I
really got into punk rock, you know? There were a lot of punk bands and I really loved
that whole thing. And as time went on in the 80’s, punk sort of morphed into metal and
then some of that was while I was into death metal and really heavy kind of stuff. The
L.A. kind of punk was fading out. In about ‘87 all these kinds of rockers were coming
into our territory and I was like what the f—- is going on here? Who are these people?
But one thing that most intensely struck me about these bands was because even though I
didn’t care for their music, I had never seen so many beautiful women in a room in my
life. That made a big impression on a young man [laughs] so I decided it might be a good
idea to start singing in some of these bands. Little did I know that I ended up being
signed. And all these labels started seeing me as a rocker guy, but really I just wanted to
party. So I fell ass backwards into these deals because people wanted me to sing. And it
hit me that I had to put out records where I had to sing this crap.

TVM: So after that you…
MP
: Well, fortunately the record executives at the time let me out of my deal; they could
see that I wasn’t the guy that anyone thought I was. So I wanted to just continue on doing
indie and punk rock, but then all these rockers wanted me to sing for these bands, some
pretty famous ones and I was like oh hell no, I’m not going to go on the road with these
guys. I mean I liked them, they’re all fun, but I couldn’t imagine being on a bus travelling
with them, so I said let’s make it easy, I’ll teach you how to sing, you become the singer
and that’s it, you don’t have to worry about getting a singer. A lot of guitar players would
come up to me and ask me to sing, but I’d say why don’t you sing and I’ll teach you?
And believe it or not next thing I know these people are signed and people are calling me
out of nowhere going hey can you teach me how to sing and I’m going what? At first I
wasn’t into it and then they went, no I’ll pay you! And I said how much? And they said
$25 for an hour and I went oh my god! To make a long story short, because I knew so
many people, I actually started getting good at what I was doing and developed my own
method; I’ve even taken from a few good vocal coaches.

TVM: Getting to your method though; how strict are you with your client; in the terms of keeping their voice healthy and able to continue singing? What exercises do they go
through?
MP
: 90% of the reason why people lose their voice on the road; because I work with a lot
of bands that are on the road, is fatigue and partying too much and talking too much. And
not taking care of themselves on just a basic fundamental level; just drinking and partying
too much is probably the most common reason. People aren’t going to say that, but that’s
what’s happening. The other thing, and the thing that I deal with besides that since I can’t
control what people do, and I tell them, please take care of yourself in every way
possible, drink water, don’t drink too much, and don’t talk too much, if you talk all day
and all night while you’re doing five shows a week. But the thing I notice as far as
technique-wise, the biggest problem I see people have both professionally and nonprofessionally is just a lack of having really a definite, consistent idea of what breathing
can do and the kind they need to support their voices.

TVM: Are these mistakes you see a lot of your old and young clients do?
MP
: What do you mean by old clients?

TMV: I mean people who have a little more experience in the business, and opposed to
newer, up and comers.
MP
: It’s so funny you say that because I was just thinking to myself, who do I have that’s
old anymore? Everybody I work with is fairly young; there’s definitely nobody near my
age that I work with. But no, I see this almost with everybody; anyone who comes in I
feel has either been taught wrong about breathing or doesn’t do it well enough or doesn’t
do it consistently enough or doesn’t even think about it. Even the professionals who
know what they’re doing, their problem is consistency; they know how to breathe but
over time these lose it. But that’s when you become a vocal coach; you’re really that
coach that doesn’t let people slide, it’s very much like being an athletic coach.

TVM: At what point does an artist break away from their vocal coach? Is it ever an ego
thing?
MP
: No, I’ve never experienced an ego thing, there’s just sort of a reality. I always say
I’m trying to work my way out of a job; once an act gets signed that I’m working with,
then they’re going in the studio, then they’re going on tour and then I’m not going to see
them until they’re back in town and stuff like that so I don’t really feel like, at least in
L.A. Though there are some people who may not be as public about having a vocal
coach, definitely that’s true, but that’s now what’s really happening in the background.
They’re definitely very happy to have someone help them with the most important thing
in their life that’s making them money, you know?

TVM: Some believe they don’t need vocal training, but even for the “born talents” why
should they see someone like you?
MP
: It depends, I agree with that, some people are born talented but there’s a difference
between being talented and working as a professional, you know? When we hear you and
go “oh my god you have a great voice” you know, let’s say they do a 40-minute set once
a month, well that’s one thing, but let’s see six nights a week, three sets or you’re
travelling all over the world; then it becomes more about vocal health than vocal training
so that you can handle the load because it’s very intense on a performer to be on the road
for a long period of time. It’s very difficult physically, mentally, in every way to always
be at your best. So even if you have a lot of talent, I have to now build you up so you can
last through a long tour; I Skype with people just to keep them in shape.

TVM: What are your thoughts on modern voice modulation; auto-tune, etc?
MP
: I guess I really don’t care about it that much; like it’s just sort of part of reality. A
lot of the time when there’s leaps in technology, I don’t really argue with it, it’s just
that’s what’s going on. There are people who are real singers, and then there are people
who are performers. I think auto-tune because you can’t sing is you not being able to
sing. And auto-tune because you’re the producer or you’re just trying to get stuff done or
a touch up here or there is fine, but if you’re using auto-tune because your singer cannot
stay on pitch, then you don’t have a singer; you’re fabricating one.
Some producers I know use auto-tune on great singers just to get that little bit of buzz
that people are used to; that sound of auto-tune, even if it’s not correcting the pitch. They
just like it as an effect; it really has nothing to do with the singer’s ability.

TVM: We’re currently having this conversation over Skype, and you mentioned you also
give lessons over it. Can you talk about that experience and how it benefits or doesn’t the voice?
MP
: I do a lot of Skype lessons, but to be honest with you, a lot of the times because I
Skype internationally and nationally, since I’m a Los Angeles industry vocal coach,
there’s also other guys here, guys in New York, guys in Nashville. The guys who are the
best of us are going to be wherever it’s happening because that’s where the business is; I
mean I probably do 30-40 lessons a week here. If you’re living somewhere that doesn’t
have this quality of vocal lessons from teachers, you’re going to get a lot more from a
voice lesson on Skype from a good coach then taking somebody who’s regional to you
who really isn’t as strong as we are. Also, you have to understand that people like us are
very tied in with the music industry, so we kind of know what’s going on before
something’s even happening so we also benefit people in being that counsellor kind of
role, someone who consult about what’s happening in the market-place that can help
singers too that someone not in L.A. might not know what’s going on.

TVM: You live in Los Angeles, but how has the industry varied in different cities you’ve
been to?
MP
: That’s a really good question; I’d say Los Angeles is where contracts get signed. It’s
a production town, like this is a place where records get made. This is where all the labels
are; this is the music business and production heart. There’s stuff in New York, but not as
much here; I get so many people coming from New York to here all the time; producers,
famous artists. I never hear of anybody in L.A. going to New York very often. I never
hear anyone say “Oh, I need to go to New York to fill in the blank”. But like in Nashville, it seems like a songwriter’s town. There are definitely producers, but there’s a whole different culture of song-writing there, people collaborate a whole lot more on songs. That’s kind of changing here; the issue though is that most of the lawsuits in music are over song-writing, whereas in Nashville people seem to not give a damn; they’re like “Hey, let’s just get together and write!” There’s a new generation of people coming together, and I like that.

TVM: I’m curious too, because I’m from Canada and this magazine is based in Canada,
have you ever been there to do any music work?
MP
: Not really, but I have been working with people from Canada and I’m a big fan of
many of their acts; such as Alice Glass from Crystal Castles, Grimes and Drake. There
seems to be more that I’m hearing from Canada than I have in a long time, in fact one of
my artists just got signed to a record label in Canada on purpose, because they wanted to
start their fan-base in Canada rather than be in America. I thought that a very interesting
way of looking at things. I feel like Canada to be honest is a little bit of an untapped
possible sleeping giant maybe.

TMV: On your website it says that you’re completely open to working with non-“A-list”
talent, what do you often see in them that you don’t with more established names?
MP
: It’s funny I mean, there’s A-list talent and there’s A-list fame, you know? They’re
not always the same, but the ones you know about have the A-list fame. Everyone I’ve
worked with, I’ve seen great things, but I have passed on people who are fairly well know
because I didn’t want them to make me look bad [laughs]. And then you get these people
out of nowhere who are amazing…really f—ing amazing, you just go oh my god! I get
called mostly by managers and labels, so I get a lot of these up and coming artists that
have talent, but they just need to be tightened up or they’re losing their voice on tour or
the label or the manager is insecure about the singer’s level of strength. Just because
they’re not A-list, doesn’t mean that I don’t want to be part of them, this is where the
artist development part of things go.

TMV: So even say if someone from a random small town, completely off the radar, but
they can contact you, they can pay the price, basically does pure talent just really grab
your attention?
MP
: There’s no reason for me at this point to take anybody just because they can afford
the price, you know what I mean? I’ve gotten to a point where I can kind of, not quite
pick and choose, but I have to have a feeling about something, like I can tell this person
wants to sing more than anything in their life. They may never go anywhere
commercially but if that’s their desire, then I want to give them their dream, you know?
The other side of it is that people are really delusional and I won’t take them. So in a
sense what you’re saying is true, but I got to have a feeling that I’m serving somebody;
that I’m not just enabling somebody, or taking their money because they can afford me, I
have to feel like what I’m doing is really important to them, for some reason that is
important to me; which could even be a non-professional desire, like somebody just
wants to learn how to sing. I’ve had people contact me and say “hey man, all my life I’ve
wanted to sing, I just want to learn how to sing” and I’m into that, I think that’s cool.
I’ve been doing this so long that status is not the thing that makes me jump over hoops
and you know, and the lack of status is not going to make me go “Oh no, you’re not good
enough for somebody like myself”; I just have a different kind of process.

TVM: Just to end off here, how does a vocal coach help establish a vocalist’s identity?
MP
: I think that…that’s a really good question by the way! I think that identity is the
most important thing about a singer, period. I always say to somebody, you can sing
great, you can sound so good singing, but if nobody likes you and what you’re doing as
an artist, like they don’t feel you or your identity, then it doesn’t matter if you’re a great
singer. They’ll go “oh well they’re a great singer but they’re boring.” Identity is the most
important thing, so I think a good vocal coach, and this is what I strive to do, is to all the
time be reinforcing that thing you see as their strongest vocal element that is having the
most connectivity and impact. I myself being a musician and having played in front of big crowds, I know what it’s like to connect with a crowd. There’s a certain kind of identity that goes with that which makes it happen. You can kind of define it that everybody has their own way of doing that, and I think that a vocal coach has to be smart enough, or empathic enough to know what that person’s identity is and to never let them leave it. It’s like you’re always
necessarily giving it to them, like being “oh you should be this”, you got to see it because
there’s something a vocal coach can’t do, they can make you sound better but they can’t
give you what only an artist can do, which is be an artist, that’s their job, my job is to
filter all the crap out of there to make sure that it’s just pure. And then also, I am a
consultant too, like I’ll have long talks about this with all my clients, like this is what I’m
getting from you, is this what you want? So I have to make sure that their identity is
solid, and is exactly how they want to represent themselves.

Business

Why Are So Many Rap Concerts Getting Canceled?

From a handful of Lil Baby concert stops to large events like the Made in America festival, rap concerts have been getting canceled quite frequently in recent years.

Published

on

Dan Runcie

Lizzo at a concert in Minnesota (via Manitou Messenger)

Nicki Minaj’s NICKIHNDRXX Tour — canceled in North America. Chance the Rapper’s Big Day Tour — canceled everywhere. T-Pain’s 1UP DLC Tour — canceled. Cardi B’s Invasion of Privacy Tour— chose not to do one.

Touring’s traditional model needs work. Cancellations have happened for years, but this recent wave is different. Many hip-hop artists overestimate demand for ticket sales. We live in an era with endless data, but touring decisions still seem like the industry blindly throws darts. Meanwhile, artists who can sell out those same venues have proudly taken new approaches. These trends are connected.

The popularity of music festivals and concert residencies have added new variables to the live performance mix. Mainstream artists are on a quest to maximize each option. Some are farther along than others. But by the time the majority of rappers find the ideal balance, the touring business might be behind the curve.


Opportunity cost is higher than ever

When artists are on tour, they’re on the road day-in, day-out. It’s traditionally seen as a justifiable tradeoff since many artists earn a majority of their revenue from touring. But it’s still time-intensive, laborious, and costly.

Here’s what I wrote in 2018 in Why Choosing the Right Concert Venue Matters:

A few years ago, Beyoncé, like Drake, once played it safe with concert tours. In 2013 and 2014, The Mrs. Carter World Tour earned an impressive $230 million, but it took Queen Bey 132 shows and twelve months of touring to do so…

Had Beyoncé subjected herself to the same arenas for [On the Run Tour, The Formation World Tour, and On The Run II Tour], she would have needed to perform an additional 207 shows since 2014 to match the $565 million her concerts have grossed in revenue. It would have been impossible to do all those shows while pregnant with the twins, make Lemonade, and do all the other stuff Beyoncé does.

There’s only a handful of artists like Beyonce who can justify the jump to a stadium. For the rest, festivals and short-term Las Vegas residencies are a viable alternative.

But even Taylor Swift has moved on from stadium tours. This summer the 1989 singer will do a European festival run (like Cardi B did last summer), then launch her own festival, Lover Fest, in Boston and Los Angeles. It doesn’t get more 2020 than that.

In an August interview with Ryan Seacrest, she explained why she didn’t do a traditional tour:

“I’m not quite sure what we’re doing with touring. I don’t want to do the same thing every time because I don’t want my life to feel like I’m on a treadmill. There’s a lot that goes into touring that nobody knows about — like you have to reserve stadiums like a year and a half in advance, and that to me is a lot. With ‘Reputation,’ I knew that nobody would really fully understand the album until they saw it live, but this album is different because people are seeming to get it on the first listen.”

All that’s true, but let’s remember two things. First, Taylor is in a select group of artists who can sell out the Rose Bowl, Soldier Field, and MetLife Stadium on back-to-back nights. She wouldn’t forgo that opportunity unless it made financial sense. Second, she’s right about the challenge in reserving venues eighteen months in advance. It’s especially frustrating for those who rise quickly and can’t easily pivot. It’s a good problem to have, sure. But it’s still a problem.

Last year, Lizzo rose to stardom so fast that she outpaced her touring revenue. According to Billboard, last spring’s Cuz I Love You Tour was performed in front of crowds of less than 2,000 people, grossing just over $50,000 per night. To capitalize on her momentum, she came back in the fall with the Cuz I Love You Too Tour at venues that were twice the capacity. But by that point “Truth Hurts” was #1 on the charts and nominated for Grammys. She still couldn’t keep up.

My wife and her friends bought tickets for Lizzo’s October show in San Francisco. They bought tickets at face value back in May for $50. The week before her show they were selling on StubHub for $350! It was a scalper’s dream but an artist’s biggest frustration. All the value was captured by the secondary market. Sure, there’s a chance Lizzo pulled a Metallica-Live Nation and scalped her own tickets. But if that ever happened… whew buddy. The Lizzo hive (and the anti-Lizzo hive) would have burned the internet down by now.

Hip-hop has an uphill battle

The mentality required to succeed in hip-hop and touring is in direct conflict. Most mainstream rappers take pride in beating the odds. They had to bet on themselves to make it this far. Why stop now?

But touring requires far more pragmatism. It’s economics. When supply meets demand, everyone’s happy. Those economics can be especially challenging for hip-hop though, where its streaming popularity outweighs its touring performance.

In a 2018 Wall Street Journal article, Neil Shah broke down how hip-hop may rule the record industry, rock is still king on the road:

There are many reasons that rock remains so powerful on the road, including that, as an older genre, it had a head start on pop and rap. Giant tours by older rap icons like Jay-Z aren’t as common. Fans of newer hip-hop artists skew younger, including teens with less disposable cash, making festival gigs more economical than lengthy, sprawling tours.

“Drake can do four Madison Square Garden shows, but Phish can do 17,” says Peter Shapiro, a New York-based independent concert promoter. Especially in the day-to-day business of clubs and theaters, rock bands, he adds, “still have a huge impact.”

This can make it mistakenly easy for an artist who dominates on RapCaviar or SoundCloud charts to think they are ready for the biggest stages available. Of the top 10 global tours of 2019, none of them were hip-hop. In 2018, just one (Beyonce and Jay Z’s On The Run II). Genre plays a factor.

https://youtube.com/watch?v=WTuIILNXyx4%3Fversion%3D3%26rel%3D1%26showsearch%3D0%26showinfo%3D1%26iv_load_policy%3D1%26fs%3D1%26hl%3Den-US%26autohide%3D2%26wmode%3Dtransparent
A good clip from The Joe Budden Podcast where they break down Chance’s canceled tour.

Artists bet on themselves, which is costly

Challenges arise when artists who were once the hot kid start to cool off and need to accept reality. They might not be DONE done, but their prime days are behind them.

That’s where Nicki Minaj and Chance the Rapper are at. Neither admitted that low demand drove their cancellations, but we can follow T-Pain’s humble advice and read between the lines. Several industry insiders believe that both Nicki and Chance couldn’t sell enough tickets to fill 25+ arenas across the US. (I also covered Nicki’s ticketing woes in the Globalization of Hip-Hop, Part I and Chance the Rapper’s in a recent Member Update.)

When both rappers first announced these tours, I thought to myself, “Who the hell gassed them up to think they can still command an arena tour? Who signed this off?” There are plenty of fingers to point, but honestly, neither rapper needed extra convincing.

Keep in mind, Nicki spent the past decade silencing doubters who never thought a female rapper could reach the heights she did. Chance proved the industry wrong as an indie rapper who won Grammys and did arena tours. Their brand is to stay resilient when projections told them otherwise. You wanna go back in time and try to convince them that the lackluster responses to “Chun-Li” and “Groceries” were signs of what’s to come? Yea, good luck with that.

Their mentality is understandable, but it distorts reality. And as more superstars like Taylor and Cardi consider alternatives to touring, promoters may be stretched to fill those same venues with artists who can’t compete in that weight class. It will inevitably lead to more cancellations.

There are levels to this

The traditional touring model is extremely linear. There are tons of venue options for rising rappers who want to perform for a few hundred or a few thousand people. But the leap to arenas (~15,000) is no joke. The jump up to stadiums (~50,000+) is even steeper. The artists at the in-between stages are more likely to leave money on the table or cancel because they couldn’t sell.

The popularity of festivals, residencies, and private events add more options to meet demand:

As AR/VR capabilities develop, more of them will be added to this mix too

I made a similar chart last year on how the traditional albums model has evolved with “mixtapes,” visual albums, podcasts, and more. The trend is similar here. Increased options lead to more experimentation and put artists in control.

Where is this all heading?

This trend should be top of mind for both Live Nation and AEG, which own and operate thousands of venues. It should also concern those who individually manage their venues.

I don’t expect arenas to shorten the timeline for advance booking or cancellation policies. That’s the nature of events in popular venues, whether it’s a wedding or a Migos concert. But they can lean into the trend by pitching themselves as locations for festivals, residencies, private events, or mixed reality experiences. It may be hard to compete against the machine of Coachella, but Rolling Loud and plenty of other festivals are more open to working with what’s available.

By now, every rapper with a big enough following has had at least wondered, “What if I launched my own Astroworld or OVO Fest? Should I do a Vegas residency too?” As I laid out in Why Rappers Started Running Their Own Music Festivals, artists want to leverage their power and run the show. They want the money from the highest profit margin areas of live performance, like sponsorship and concessions. It’s the same model that Floyd Mayweather uses in his boxing matches. He rents out the building and collects the revenue from everything else.


Touring will always be key for the up and comers who want to meet their day-ones. It worked for Meg the Stallion in the rooftop cypher days and Cardi B in the Love & Hip-Hop days. It will always be a core for the legacy artists who can draw crowds wherever—like Rolling Stones, Elton John, or Jay Z. But there’s a whoooole lot of artists between up-and-comers and Hov.

These artist want more options, and the market can offer them. The rest of the industry will be forced to adapt sooner or later.

READ MORE: https://trapital.co/2020/01/09/the-hip-hop-touring-business-is-broken/

Dan Runcie

Dan Runcie

Founder of Trapital

Continue Reading

Business

CHRIS BROWN: The Top Recording Artist ALIVE [Vocal Range]

Chris Brown, American recording artist, and an actor were born in Tappahannock, Virginia to Clinton Brown a corrections officer at the local prison and Joyce Hawkins, former director of a daycare center.

Published

on

His keen interest in music and dance made him teach himself both the arts and he declares that Micheal Jackson was his role model. He also participated in the local church choir and local talent shows. His perfection in mimicry of an Usher performance made his mother realize his potential and she started looking for a record deal opportunity.

Chris Brown’s Voice Type & Vocal Range

Chris Brown has a light Lyric tenor vocal style. His vocal potential was first discovered by his mom when he was still a kid. Brown reveals to People magazine that he was 11 and watching Ushers performance ‘My Way’, and I began endeavoring to impersonate it. My mother resembled, ‘You can sing?’ And I resembled, ‘Well, no doubt, Mama.” in this way, and began to sing.

Voice Type: Light-Lyric Tenor
Range: E2-E5-G#5

Chris Brown’s voice sits high up. He has relative easiness in the fifth octave (Yeah 3x, This Christmas, Crawl). The strain really makes it difficult for him to sing there, yet he does not have much of a problem. He likewise sings to be a baritone in the E4-G4 range effortlessly.

Not so sure where this originates from, yet I have seen it many times previously. In fact, He is brighter and lighter than the spinto. Due to the fact that the spinto will have a more substantial, warmer and substantial voice. Chris’ voice is awfully splendid and light to be a spinto.

He has a light and thin voice. His voice is additionally surprisingly energetic. Thus he should be a light-verse tenor.

Achievements

At the tender age of sixteen, Chris Brown made his debut with an album titled “Chris Brown” featuring the runaway hit single “Run It”. This song topped the Billboard Hot 100 in 2005 making him the first male artist whose debut song topped the chart after Montell Jordan had achieved the same in 1995. The RIAA  (Recording Industry Association of America) awarded the album a double-platinum certification and it sold more than 2 million copies in the US.

Riding on this success Chris Brown, American recording artist released his second studio album in 2007 November titled “Exclusive”. This album had two hit singles “Kiss-Kiss” featuring T-Pain and was number one and “With You” which became number two in the Billboard Hot 100 and was awarded a Platinum certification by RIAA. “The Forever edition” which is a deluxe version of his album with the single “Forever” was released in 2008 in May and this also peaked at number two position in Billboard Hot 100. “Graffiti” his third album was brought out in 2009 December and its official single “I Can Transform Ya” came up to number 20 in the Billboard Hot 100 becoming Chris Brown’s eighth hit on the charts.

Brown has other hits under his belt such as “No Air” with Jordin Sparks, “Shawty Get Loose” with Lil Mama and T-Pain, “Shortie Like Mine” with rapper Bow Wow all of which reached within number ten in the Billboard Hot 100. His dancing capabilities gave him an extra edge over other singers and he was compared to Micheal Jackson and Usher. On the negative side, Brown was given five years probationary sentence and 6 months community service for assaulting singer Rihanna. In 2010 May Chris Brown American recording artist brought out “Fan of Fan” a mixtape with Tyga and “Deuces” from this tape was released in 2010 June reaching the number one position in the U.S.

Musical Style & Influences

Chris Brown has referred to various artists as his motivation, overwhelmingly Michael Jackson. Chris Brown underlines that “Michael Jackson is the motivation behind why he involved himself in the music industry at the beginning of his music career. In “Fine China,” he represents Jackson’s impact both musically and outwardly as Britini Danielle of Ebony magazine mentioned that the melody was “reminiscent of Michael Jackson’s Off the Wall”.

And He also did mention that Usher is another role model in the music industry who seems to be a more contemporary figure for Brown. He discloses to Vibe magazine about Usher that he was the person who the youths gazed up to, in the singing and dancing world, admired him, and keeps up “If it was not for Usher, at that point Chris Brown couldn’t exist.”

Some critics suggested that Chris Brown’s first experience with R&B, perceiving his contemporary adaptions and flexibility in R&B music. As customary R&B prospered around him, the youthful singer started the development of the genre”. His first single “Run It!” as a “prelude to what Brown would keep on doing for the following decade: determinedly upset develops of blues and rhythm.

Continue Reading

Business

TOURING AND THE SINGER

Touring artists experience a wide range of issues including physical and vocal fatigue, mental boredom, poor health…

Published

on

1. How important are vocal warm-ups and why?

Warm-ups are almost more important than vocal technique practice. It is vital to ensure we are getting the vocal ligaments and the intrinsic vocal muscles ready to do the job required during singing. When we talk we only use a limited range of pitches (around a major third or so) but when we sing we may use over two octaves. By warming up we are getting the different layers of the vocal folds ready to work at the higher frequencies required for singing.  It is also important to get the larynx and the articulatory muscles ready to deal with singing lyrics. If we don’t get the voice ready and warmed up then we are running the risk of inducing vocal fatigue and ultimately misuse which could lead to vocal pathologies such as vocal fold oedema (swelling), nodules or polyps.

2. How important is vocal technique and why?

The reality is that there are many contemporary commercial singers with a successful career who do not have vocal technique to back their art or the vocal workload experienced as a touring singing/artist. It may be possible to get away with poor vocal technique in the short term or the studio setting, where it is possible to record as many tracks as necessary to get a good take. But when one is performing, live and touring, poor technique will eventually have a negative compound effect on the vocal folds, which increases the risk of injury. Having a well structured technical regime not only helps the singer to build range, stamina, strength and vocal control but will also help to readdress any imbalances acquired during the performance. Understanding how the voice works technically will help the singer to make the right choices when it comes to repertoire, vocal style, use of range or singing with a tired or sick voice.

When it comes to the creative side technique will ensure that the artist can realise their creative vision, to sing unhampered by limitations of vocal range, the ability to transition easily between registers, breath management, vocal tone, the ability to sustain long notes, vocal qualities and dynamic control.

3. What physical and mental effects can touring have on an artist? How can this contribute to vocal health problems?

Touring artists experience a wide range of issues including physical and vocal fatigue, mental boredom, poor health, disruption to dietary and daily routines, feelings of isolation from friends and family. Whether they are travelling in a band van, tour bus or flying, most artists suffer from disruption in sleep, daily routine, dietary habits etc.  When there is a group of people travelling together in close proximity there is also an increase in risk for communicable illnesses such as colds and cases of flu. Flying may cause dehydration and vocal fold swelling due to an increase in atmospheric pressure. This may cause the voice to be husky or hoarse and limit the singer’s ability to access their upper/lower ranges. Environmental conditions such as air-conditioning, heating, humidity, dryness, altitude and cold temperatures will also impact the singer’s physical, mental and vocal health. In addition, if they are crossing time-lines then jet-lag will contribute by reducing physical and mental function. Being tired, stressed, rundown or dehydrated will impact the vocal fold’s ability to function optimally resulting in loss of range, tonal quality and sustainability.

4. Are vocal health problems more common today? Or do you think artists are more open about their health as it is mediated in the press more?

I think it is a combination of instant media and the kind of pressure, vocally and physically the current day artist is under. Pressure to ensure they sell their music and make money for their label etc.  This means that they tour heavily and they are obliged to do a heavy load of publicity and networking, in turn, their voice does not get as much rest as it needs to do its job on stage night after night. Depending on the label/management tours may be more intensive with more performances packed in over a shorter period. Some labels have a policy of not allowing their artist to do more than three shows in a row, but not all artists are well looked after in this way. In the past, it would have been viewed more negatively by the public/fans if they knew that the artist was having vocal problems. Today people seem to think it’s par for the course as there is so much in the media about singers who have to cancel tours and gigs due to voice problems.

5. If there is no option to cancel a show a steroid injection may be required. What are the effects of this? Is it only temporary? Can it do more harm than good?

Steroid injections can be very effective in the short-term to help a performer get through a show. When a major artist cancels it means the loss of millions of dollars. So the management tries hard to prevent this from occurring. One-off steroid injections do not commonly have long-term medical side-effects.  It only becomes problematic when this becomes a regular dose. Having an injection does carry a risk of injury if it is not done safely and accurately. High or prolonged doses of steroids (injections or tablets) will impact the body systemically e.g. excess fat distributed weirdly, prone to infections, and a risk of injury to the vocal folds such as nodules, haemorrhage or laryngitis.

Given appropriately and safely a steroid injection can save the day.

6. Are there any other ‘quick fix’ medicines that are used on tour? What are the effects?

I can’t think of any. I imagine any kind of analgesia that helps with pain might be used in some cases. Depending on the type of the analgesia will depend on the side effects. Obviously, narcotics run the risk of dependency and poor motor control. Some of the more common over the counter types such as paracetamol and codeine can cause constipation if taken regularly. Salicylates (e.g. aspirin) act as blood thinners and are not recommended for singers as a possible side-effect could be vocal fold haemorrhage.

7. Is it necessary to have surgery or will the body fight back if it’s allowed complete vocal rest?

Surgery depends on the type and severity of the vocal pathology as well as the time constraints of the artist. If there is pressure for the artist to get out and work e.g major tour, imminent album launch or significant performance then the powers that be are more likely to opt for surgery. If the artist/singer is not under such pressure or can’t afford surgery then alternative options may be considered at first.

  • These days vocal nodules are generally treated with therapy and vocal technique if they are in the pre-nodular or soft stages. Some surgeons will treat hard nodules with surgery, though I have seen cases where nodules have not been surgically removed and the singer had successful rehabilitation through voice therapy and correction of poor vocal technique.
  • Vocal polyps and severe haemorrhages, cysts and granulomas generally require surgical intervention. The singer is then on vocal rest for 2-3 weeks.
  • Vocal oedema requires rest and addressing the cause.
  • Infections and laryngitis do not require surgery.

It very much depends also on the doctor i.e. their training and experience. An ENT surgeon or ENT/laryngologist who works with singers a lot will tend to only do surgery if necessary, and there is no response to voice therapy and/or addressing the cause.

Vocal rest will help in many instances but the problem may re-occur if the cause is not addressed. Many common voice issues in singers can be dealt with through rest, rehydration, good vocal technique and a balanced healthy diet.

8. Do you think audiences have higher expectations when going to watch an artist perform? ie: Pitch, physically performing.

With the use of auto-tuning in the studio, audiences have come to expect a singer to sing perfectly. This is compounded by the impact of music videos and the use of lip-syncing, as well as the use of auto-tuning in the live setting. Having said that the general listening audience is not always focusing on things such as pitch or even lyrics, for them, it’s the experience of the live performance.

9. What is your advice for a singer going on tour?

Where possible sleep – cat naps are as useful to the body as whole night sleeps, ensure you are getting 1.5 to 2 L of water a day, take dietary supplements, avoid respiratory infections like the plague. Take your own pillow on tour, healthy snacks, eyeshades, earplugs, nebulizer with normal saline, throat massager and most importantly straws so you can do regular straw therapy.

Don’t expect your voice to be able to work optimally if you don’t look after it, excessive talking, alcohol, smoking, drugs, poor diet and late nights will prevent your voice from working to its best.

At the end of the day, this is your job and what your audience is paying for. You are the equivalent of a vocal athlete. Follow these tips:

  • maintain a regular and personalised vocal exercise regime
  • do warm-ups and downs before/after a performance
  • if possible change repertoire, vocal range and performance energy to accommodate the days when you or your voice are fatigued
  • check in regularly with a vocal coach who understands how to keep you vocally fit and healthy
  • do physical exercise to ensure your body is supporting your voice.
  • Keep well hydrated
  • Maintain a healthy and balanced diet with supplements to boost your immune system
  • sleep whenever possible
  • avoid sick people!

READ MORE: https://linehilton.com/touring-and-the-singer/

Continue Reading

Trending