Florida State University Libraries: Three Approaches For Teaching Laryngeal Stability: Curing The "Necktie Tenor"
Florida State University Libraries: Three Approaches For Teaching Laryngeal Stability: Curing The "Necktie Tenor"
Florida State University Libraries: Three Approaches For Teaching Laryngeal Stability: Curing The "Necktie Tenor"
2005
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THE FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY
COLLEGE OF MUSIC
By
Degree Awarded:
Spring Semester, 2005
The members of the Committee approve the treatise of Victor Isaac Hurtado defended
on March 30th, 2005.
______________________________
Stanford Olsen
Professor Directing Treatise
______________________________
Seth Beckman
Outside Committee Member
______________________________
Douglas Fisher
Committee Member
______________________________
Larry Gerber
Committee Member
______________________________
Jerrold Pope
Committee Member
The Office of Graduate Studies has verified and approved the above named committee
members.
ii
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
My sincere thanks belong to the members of my committee who have helped shape
the direction, content, and quality of this treatise. Stanford Olsen’s teaching style facilitated
my journey to laryngeal stability, and his guidance, counsel, and friendship have profoundly
influenced my life as an artist, husband, father, and teacher. Jerrold Pope’s two pedagogy
seminars gave me my first clear understanding of the vocal apparatus, and they caused me to
form ideas, opinions, and skills as a teacher. The time and effort he dedicates to students will
serve as my example in the future. Douglas Fisher has impacted my life in the classroom, in
the studio, and on the stage. His endless knowledge of all things opera, as well as his keen
writing sensibility were influential on this paper and upon me as an artist. Professor Larry
Gerber’s pedagogical understanding, writing acumen, and his personal commitment as a
committee member were a continual asset to the earning of my degree and completion of this
paper. Dr. Seth Beckman selflessly agreed to a be a late addition to my committee in order to
help me meet new requirements for the degree. I appreciate his help with this treatise and its
subsequent defense. Finally, Dr. Clifford Madsen’s class on behavior modification in music,
as well as my training and year-long study of behavior management with Girls and Boys
Town, USA were invaluable to the behavioral portions of this treatise.
Above all, my wife Kim has been the driving force behind the completion of this
treatise. Her kind prodding, editing, and formatting made this undertaking a much smoother
process. Her support and love continue to inspire me.
iii
TABLE OF CONTENTS
List of Tables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . v
Abstract . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . vi
INTRODUCTION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
BIBLIOGRAPHY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
iv
LIST OF TABLES
1. ABC’s of Behavior . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
4. Goal Timetable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64
v
ABSTRACT
Many singers struggle with the issue of laryngeal instability. A larynx that moves
upward significantly during singing causes a variety of vocal complications, yet it too often
goes undetected or unaddressed by voice teachers. Tenors in particular are prone to laryngeal
elevation due to the frequent tessitura demands in the repertoire which exploit the transition
into the high voice known as the passaggio. Tenors who struggle with laryngeal stability are
often referred to as “necktie tenors.” Many classical singers acquire a stable laryngeal
position early on in their training by establishing good posture and breathing skills, but some
singers escape their early training with persistent habits of laryngeal instability. Once these
habits solidify, they can be particularly difficult to correct. This text is intended to provide
strategies to teachers and singers which will allow them to identify and correct varying
degrees of habitual instability of the larynx in classical singing.
vi
INTRODUCTION
In his book Training Tenor Voices, pedagogue Richard Miller makes mention of a
type of singer known as the “necktie tenor.” He describes this as one who “raises his larynx
in inhalation or at the onset, or with mounting pitch.”1 The derogatory term “necktie,” refers
to the aural and visual aspects of many high laryngeal singers who, while producing thin and
restricted sounds, tend to thrust the chin forward and tip the head back as they sing. Most
authorities agree that in classical singing, the raised larynx is unacceptable.2 A raised larynx
produces sounds lacking resonance and projection, and it puts strain on the vocal folds. While
many students of singing are able to find a more stable, low laryngeal position by correcting
their posture and breathing, a number of singers struggle with this issue perpetually.3 In fact,
for singers with severe high-larynx habits, the task of singing with a stable, low larynx is
daunting. Aronson admits that in therapy for lowering laryngeal position, the
“musculoskeletal tension [of the larynx] is a powerfully resistive force, and less aggressive
methods often fail.”4 This treatise provides both aggressive and less aggressive methods for
correcting laryngeal instability and establishing the low laryngeal position.
1
Richard Miller, Training Tenor Voices (New York: Schirmer Books, 1993), 123.
2
Craig Timberlake, “Pedagogical Perspectives, Past and Present: Laryngeal
Positioning,” NATS Journal (September/October 1994), 40.
3
Miller, Traning Tenor Voices, 125.
4
A. E. Aronson, Clinical Voice Disorders: An Interdisciplinary Approach (New York:
Thieme, Inc., 1985), 315.
1
CHAPTER 1
THE PROS AND CONS OF HIGH, LOW, AND DEPRESSED LARYNGEAL POSITIONS:
THE CASE FOR THE COMFORTABLY LOW LARYNX
The human larynx is capable of producing singing sounds from several different
positions. While general consensus between voice scientists and pedagogues agrees that the
larynx should remain low, there are yet divergent ideas about laryngeal positioning.5 This
chapter will discuss the pros and cons of the high, low, and depressed laryngeal positions in
singing, and establish the low, stable larynx as the optimal position for the classical/operatic
voice.
High Larynx
Singing with an elevated laryngeal position consists of any upward excursion by the
larynx (away from its at-rest position) during singing. According to Marilee David, “Singers
elevate their larynges under a variety of circumstances. Some find a relaxed laryngeal
position only when not singing; others move their larynges up and down with pitch, much
5
James C. McKinney, The Diagnosis and Correction of Vocal Faults (Nashville:
Genevox Music Group, 1994), 133; Ingo Titze, “Raised Versus Lowered Larynx Singing,”
NATS Journal 50, no. 2 (November/December 1993), 37.
2
like climbing stairs.”6 The elevated larynx can occur in both speaking and singing, typically
as pitch rises.7 The larynx elevates when the muscles of the tongue, jaw and or neck become
active participants in pitch change. Laryngeal elevation tends to occur naturally in untrained
singers.
Perceived Pros
If there were no perceived payoff to using a high laryngeal position, people would not
form the habit in the first place. So, what advantages does the raised laryngeal position offer,
and do they extend into operatic singing? There are in fact certain aspects of singing that
seem to come easier when using a high laryngeal position. The elevated larynx can help
untrained singers reach higher notes more quickly, can produce sounds akin to those heard in
popular music, can facilitate types of choral singing, and can be used in lieu of a true
pianissimo to create the softest dynamics. For some, the advantages of allowing the high
laryngeal position may include personal aesthetic preferences for light singing used in some
Baroque and early Classical music. The worth of each of these advantages must then be
weighed against that of alternative laryngeal positions in light of the singer’s and teacher’s
overall musical goals and values.
For most singers and many teachers, an awareness of the laryngeal position is
something that lies below the level of consciousness. Callaghan states, “Conscious control of
the larynx is seen by many teachers as either impossible or undesirable.”8 Many singers do
not purposely choose a specific laryngeal position. Instead, they arrive at their position based
on what allows them to sing what they want to sing. Vennard claimed that most untrained
singers only know how to use one vocal register. He found that untrained male singers often
use only a “tense, heavy production,” and thus their unused register is the falsetto. He further
claimed that when one of these singers ascends the scale, they end up “cracking into
6
Marilee David, The New Voice Pedagogy (Lanham, Md: The Scarecrow Press, Inc.,
1995), 39.
7
Johan Sundberg, The Science of the Singing Voice (Dekalb, IL: Northern Illinois
University Press, 1987), 113.
8
Jean Callaghan, “The Implications of Voice Science for Voice Pedagogy: The
Singer’s Formant,” NATS Journal 50, no. 5 (May/June 1994), 7.
3
falsetto.”9 As beginning singers make attempts at singing in the higher parts of the range and
avoiding falsetto, they often inadvertently allow the larynx to move with the pitch, and thus
are able to produce pitches outside the speaking range into the area of the voice known as the
zona di passaggio.
The high laryngeal position can also seem conducive to producing high notes. Titze
established that the raised laryngeal position makes use of extrinsic laryngeal muscles to
assist in elongating the vocal folds, and the result is a “brighter sound quality,” and an easier
excursion into “the extreme high notes of the pitch range.” Titze admits that the untrained
singer may simply be able to reach certain notes more quickly by allowing the larynx to move
freely. 10 Perhaps this is the very reason that so many beginning singers develop habits of
laryngeal elevation: they can reach higher notes more quickly, without having first
established other technical aspects such as breath management and posture. Male voices in
particular may find that elevating the larynx provides them a way to sing higher notes without
breaking into falsetto. Tenors are more prone to develop habits of laryngeal elevation
because more of their music lies well above the normal speaking voice range.
Another perceived advantage to singing with a raised laryngeal position is that it can
allow singers to produce tone qualities that are familiar to them as is commonly heard in
popular music. According to Timberlake, “Some male pop singers who sing seemingly only
in the upper fifth or sixth of the tenor range (F4-D5)...function with an extraordinary instinct
for survival between open and closed production.”11 The “open,” or yell-like, quality referred
to by Timberlake is a common attribute of raised laryngeal singing, and it should not be
confused with “open throat” singing, or gola aperta, which has a connection to low-larynx
singing. Instead, open singing here refers to the screechy, spread sound that results when one
sings into the top voice without modifying vowels. Singers who grow up with high exposure
to popular music may naturally migrate towards that type of vocal production. Habits of
9
William Vennard, Singing: The Mechanism and the Technic (New York: Carl
Fischer, Inc., 1967), 76.
10
Titze, “Raised Versus Lowered Larynx Singing,” 37.
11
Timberlake, “Laryngeal Positioning,” 42.
4
laryngeal elevation may form based on one’s tonal ideals of popular music that exist prior to
the student’s study of the classical technique.
Often, choirs contain singers who lack classical vocal training, and therefore naturally
use an elevated laryngeal position. The sound produced by a raised larynx can be easier to
blend because it lacks singer’s formant and is rarely as vibrant. Choir directors who prefer
soft, straight-toned singing are more likely to elicit raised-laryngeal vocal production from
their singers. In choirs that strive for a particularly blended sound, young singers are
compelled to find a way to sing in such a way that their voices do not stick out. The high
laryngeal position allows singers to phonate without acquiring the kind of acoustic intensity
that would result in a disruption of the group’s blend. The raised laryngeal position is
particularly prevalent in choral tenors who are required to sing above the staff for prolonged
periods of time. This type of singing can occur with a raised laryngeal position, and rarely
without vocal strain.
Another perceived advantage of the high laryngeal position is the ability to produce
soft dynamics, particularly in the upper half of the vocal range. These soft sounds are
characterized by a lack of “core” or resonance. Richard miller calls this sound voce finta, or
“feigned voice.” Miller allows that singers may occasionally unseat their vocal mechanism to
produce voce finta when expressing certain emotions or tone colors.12 However, those who
sing with the raised laryngeal position end up using voce finta regularly in lieu of a true
supported pianissimo. To them it may seem easy to sing softly in the higher register, but the
sound will lack resonance. Voce finta may appeal to some tastes, and some settings.
The high laryngeal position in singing does have certain perceived advantages within
specific contexts. Untrained singers may find it easier to produce higher notes, they may
produce a sound similar to the tonal ideals in popular music, they can find success in the
choral setting, and they can produce soft dynamics even in higher registers. However, as
evidenced below, such advantages are only perceived, and not applicable in most classical
solo singing.
12
Miller, Training Tenor Voices, 123.
5
Cons
There are a variety of disadvantages to singing with an elevated laryngeal position in
classical singing. First, the high laryngeal position is far less likely to produce the singer’s
formant. Second, it can produce tones that are aesthetically inferior and atypical of the
operatic sound. Third, it can handicap other aspects of the vocal technique, and cause undue
stress on the vocal mechanism.
According to Morris and Weiss, “The production of a strong singer’s formant for the
training of stage singers is an apparent universally desirable goal in voice pedagogy.”13 The
singer’s formant is an acoustical boost of energy marked by overtones of 2800-3200 Hertz,
which is often known as “ring.” Sundberg clarifies some of the virtues of having the singer’s
formant: “The singer’s formant...seems to facilitate our hearing of the singer’s voice when
the orchestral accompaniment is loud; the singer’s formant improves the audibility of the
voice without extra cost in vocal effort.”14 In operatic singing, where electronic amplification
of the voice is atypical, it is necessary for voices to emerge through the orchestra. The
frequencies of the singer’s formant are unique within orchestral texture, which allows the
voice to be heard.15 One of the most important disadvantages of singing with a high laryngeal
position is that the raised larynx usually eliminates the singer’s formant. There are two main
reasons why an elevated larynx will not likely produce the singer’s formant. First, raising the
larynx shortens the vocal tract, which decreases resonating space above the glottis and tends
to constrict the throat.16 Second, high laryngeal production alters the conditions of vocal fold
vibration by using extrinsic muscles, rather than intrinsic ones, to stretch the cords for higher
pitches. While the exact origin of the singer’s formant is not known, most voice scientists
feel that it is either a phenomenon of resonance generated in the laryngeal area, an issue of
13
J. Morris and R. Weiss, “The Singer’s Formant Revisited: Pedagogical Implications
Based on a New Study,” Journal of Singing 53 (January/February 1997), 22.
14
Timberlake, “Laryngeal Positioning,” 39.
15
McKinney, Diagnosis and Correction of Vocal Faults, 133.
16
Ibid., 131.
6
proper vocal fold vibration in the larynx, or a combination of both.17 In any case, experts
concur that raising the larynx disrupts both the resonating conditions and vibrating conditions
of the voice, thereby dampening singer’s formant. Without the benefit of the singer’s
formant, high-larynx singers will not be heard as well through orchestral textures or attain the
thrilling vocal brilliance associated with operatic singing.
Another disadvantage to using the high laryngeal position relates to the types of tones
that are produced. Appelman claims, “Each laryngeal position will affect the timbre and
character of the voice.” He then goes on to say that the elevated larynx produces sounds that
are “blatant and colorless.”18 Sundberg describes the sound as “shrill.”19 G. B. Lamperti
notes that tones produced by “tipping the head too far back while singing makes the sound
too white and endangers control.”20 Tipping the head back, or jutting it forward while
singing are tell-tale signs of the raised laryngeal position. Enrico Caruso wrote, “Singers,
especially tenors, are very apt to throw the head forward in producing high notes, and
consequently get throaty, strained voice, which is so disagreeable.”21 David suggests that the
raised-larynx sound results in “tight, strident, or harsh” tones.22 Richard Miller, who
associates the raised laryngeal position with the French school of singing, wrote the
following:
A tight-necked quality of sound manifests itself more frequently among French-
trained singers than elsewhere in the four major schools. In its most extreme
example, a high degree of nasality is present. The sound which results is produced by
a lowered velum, raised tongue, and hyoidal and laryngeal elevation. Some
17
Ibid., 125.
18
D. Ralph Appelman, The Science of Vocal Pedagogy: Theory and Application
(London: Indiana University Press, 1967), 82, 84.
19
Sundberg, The Science of the Singing Voice, 113.
20
William Earl Brown, Vocal Wisdom: Maxims of Giovanni Battista Lamperti
(Boston: Crescendo Publishing Co., 1957), 41.
21
P. Mario Marafioti, M.D., Caruso’s Method of Voice Production: The Scientific
Culture of the Voice (New York: D. Appleman and Company, 1922), 158-59.
22
David, The New Voice Pedagogy, 39.
7
coloraturas of the Italian and French schools often resort to the elevated larynx,
producing a sound which is characteristically white, shrill, and blatant.23
It is clear from the above examples that the elevated laryngeal position produces a tone that is
not aesthetically acceptable in operatic or classical singing.
Finally, singing with an elevated larynx has a domino effect on other issues of vocal
technique and can put undue stress on the vocal folds. Posture, phonation, breath,
registration, articulation, stamina, and vocal health can all be altered by virtue of laryngeal
position.
Singers who use the high laryngeal position will usually have poor posture. The
posture of a high-larynx singer may include a craned neck, a jutting jaw, and an elevated
chin.24 This type of posture is discouraged in every vocal pedagogy book surveyed here.
Along with posture, the elevated larynx commonly produces a pressed phonation.25
With the extrinsic muscles regulating pitch control, the vocal folds can become unduly tense,
requiring more airflow. This causes the folds to approximate in a forced manner. Miller
adds, “Whenever the larynx is maintained at a less than optimal posture in phonation, airflow
rate is adversely affected.”26 Good singing cannot be achieved without finding a balanced
phonation.
The high laryngeal position can also have a negative influence on breath management.
In order for high-larynx singers to compensate for their lack of resonance, they tend to
become frantic with their breathing. Instead of calm, energized muscular antagonism, they
may resort to gasping for air, and pushing and heaving their way through vocally intense
music.
23
Richard Miller, National Schools of Singing: English, French, German, and Italian
Techniques of Singing Revisited (Lanham, Md: The Scarecrow Press, Inc., 1997), 84.
24
Miller, Training Tenor Voices, 123.
25
Robert T. Sataloff, M.D., D.M.A., Professional Voice: The Science and Art of
Clinical Care, 2d ed. (San Diego, CA: Singular Publishing Group, Inc., 1997), 176;
Sundberg, The Science of the Singing Voice, 113.
26
Miller, Training Tenor Voices, 125.
8
Another likely result of the elevated-larynx technique is uneven registration. In
singers in whom the larynx pops up only when the pitch rises, a disparity of tonal quality will
likely exist. In the comfortable, low-middle range, these singers are more apt to produce a
free, tonally rich sound, but as the larynx rises, the vocal quality will change to the more
shrill, pressed sound associated with the raised laryngeal position.
Articulation can also be disrupted by elevating the larynx. The tongue plays a
primary role in articulation.27 Since muscles of the tongue connect to the larynx extrinsically,
the tongue’s ability to articulate properly has a connection to laryngeal position.
Finally, the high laryngeal position can cause vocal health problems. Pressed, or
hyper functional phonation, typical of raised-larynx singing, occurs when there is too much
tension in the larynx. Doscher notes that the intrinsic muscles of the larynx become
“overworked” in high-larynx production.28 The vocal folds slap together so vigorously that
they can become swollen and strained. Vocal health and stamina greatly diminish when
using an elevated laryngeal position.
Conclusion
Most vocal pedagogues discourage using the high laryngeal position. Nonetheless,
within certain settings, some singers may derive a few perceived advantages by using the
position. Perceived advantages may include: a quick access into the high voice, a “pop” tonal
quality, a sound conducive to choral singing, and a quick way to produce soft dynamics.
The disadvantages of using an elevated larynx in singing are numerous, and from the
perspective of classical singing, far outweigh the possible advantages. The high laryngeal
position will not often produce sounds with singer’s formant, and therefore, the sound will
not be loud enough to penetrate many orchestral textures. Also, tones produced with an
elevated laryngeal position are often unappealing and inappropriate in classical music. In
addition, the high laryngeal position tends to inhibit other aspects of the vocal technique and
cause vocal health issues.
27
Barbara Doscher, The Functional Unity of the Singing Voice, 2nd ed. (Lanham, Md.:
The Scarecrow Press, Inc., 1994), 114.
28
Ibid., 53.
9
Low-Larynx
The comfortably low laryngeal position in singing occurs when the larynx remains in
the “at-rest” position or slightly lower. In this position, there are no significant excursions
upward during phonation in any part of the vocal range. Most modern vocal pedagogues
advocate the comfortably low laryngeal position. Miller writes:
The stabilized larynx, neither ascending nor descending for pitch change, nor bobbing
about in an unsupported way with syllabic definition, is essential to all good singing.
Studies with international singers of note prove that laryngeal position remains stable
in elite vocalism.29
The low laryngeal position occurs when a proper muscular antagonism between the
swallowing and yawning muscles is established. There are many advantages to using the low
laryngeal position, and few if any disadvantages. Using the low laryngeal position will
influence matters of resonance, stamina, timbre, registration, and visual presentation.
Pros
As mentioned previously, the low laryngeal position is usually necessary in order for
one to acquire singer’s formant. Referring to studies done by Sundberg, Sataloff explains:
Experiments with acoustic models of the vocal tract showed that such a ring of
formants can be attained if the pharynx is wide as compared with the entrance to the
larynx tube. It seems that, in many singers, this is obtained by a lowering of the
larynx. In this case the larynx tube acts as a separate resonance which can appear in
the vicinity of 2.8 kHz.30
With the larynx in a comfortably low position, a fortuitous relationship between the opening
of the larynx and the pharynx is created, resulting in the presence of singer’s formant. As
previously discussed, the singer’s formant allows performers to penetrate thick orchestral
textures without exerting strain on the vocal apparatus.
29
Miller, Training Tenor Voices, 125.
30
Sataloff, Professional Voice, 174. Italics added for emphasis.
10
Increased vocal stamina is another advantage to the low, stable larynx. With a low-
larynx technique, the extrinsic muscles act as stabilizers and do not actively participate in
pitch change. With the larynx stable, the intrinsic muscles are left to assume the
responsibility for altering pitch. Speech therapists Cooper and Cooper note:
Our aim should be to relax the extrinsic muscles as well as the outer muscles above
our shoulders, and then to maintain this relationship while we make sounds. By doing
this, we are clearing the way to allow the inner muscles of the larynx to function
unobstructedly in the production of sound. In a healthy throat, if the outer muscles
are relaxed, the inner ones will take care of themselves.31
The lower laryngeal position enables the vocal folds to vibrate without added pressure
from the extrinsic muscles. Less strain on the vocal folds allows singers to sing for longer
intervals without tiring. Doscher explains: “In a strained, pinched production...when the
larynx is too high, the intrinsic muscles are over-worked.”32 The low laryngeal position
requires singers to modify their vowels when changing registers. This technique, variously
referred to as aggiustamento, vowel modification, or covering, contributes to vocal longevity
and stamina. Covering “seems to include mechanisms that protect the vocal fold from
excessive strain.” Further, “covered singing near the passaggio shares some characteristics
with the so-called flow phonation and is probably desirable from the point of view of vocal
hygiene.”33 The opposite of covering, known as open or spread singing, is a byproduct of the
elevated-larynx technique and causes undue vocal strain. The low-larynx technique enables
the vocal folds to function with less fatigue, therefore giving the singer greater stamina.
One of the most valuable benefits of using a stable, low laryngeal position is the
operatic timbre it can produce. By keeping the larynx in its low position, the vocal tract
remains elongated, which produces a darker, fuller sound.34 Not only will the sound have
31
M. Cooper and M. H. Cooper, eds., Approaches to Vocal Rehabilitation
(Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas, 1977), 139.
32
Doscher, Functional Unity of the Singing Voice, 53.
33
Stellan Hertegård, Jan Gauffin, and Johan Sundberg, “Open and Covered Singing as
Studied by Means of Fiberoptics, Inverse Filtering, and Spectral Analysis,” Journal of Voice
4, no. 3 (1990), 229.
34
Sundberg, Science of the Singing Voice, 113; Appelman, Science of Vocal
Pedagogy, 84.
11
greater resonance by virtue of the singer’s formant, but it also will have a richer timbre that is
desirable for operatic and most classical singing.
Thrilling high notes are the ultimate goal for opera singers. High notes win
competitions, get people jobs, and excite audiences. While not the only important virtue in
classical singing, it probably gets the most attention, and therefore deserves just consideration
from singers and teachers. With the low laryngeal position, singers can bring the spine-
tingling resonance of the singers formant, and the dark, rich timbre of the open throat into the
high voice. This type of sound cannot be attained to the same degree with an elevated
laryngeal position. If a singer desires a ringing, full, head voice, then a stable, low larynx
must be achieved. Doscher claims that the pharyngeal space created by the low laryngeal
position makes possible the “full head voice.”35
Dealing with register transitions is an important concern of both teacher and singer.
The ability to sing with a consistent tone quality throughout the range is a widely sought after
goal in classical singing. Oren Brown asserts that “the low larynx is a must for the
integration of the different registers of the voice.”36 Shifting registers is an issue of laryngeal
control.37 Voice teacher David L. Jones makes the following claim with regard to smooth
registration:
If the larynx is trained to descend gently with inhalation...the back of the throat is
trained to open beyond the back of the tongue. The soft palate is trained to lift and the
result will be ‘pharyngeal vowels’ or an open throat. Once this space is achieved, it
has been my experience that a perfect blending of the registers is the result.38
In low-larynx singing, the length of the vocal tract remains consistent at all times, which
consequently keeps the voice quality consistent at all times.
Singing with a low laryngeal position not only facilitates consistency of sound
throughout the range, but may also facilitate voice classification. Doscher claims, “Accurate
35
Doscher, Functional Unity of the Singing Voice, 53.
36
Oren L. Brown, Discover Your Voice: How to Develop Healthy Voice Habits (San
Diego, CA: Singular Publishing Group, Inc., 1996), 81.
37
Callaghan, “The Singer’s Formant,” 7.
38
David L. Jones, “Understanding and Solving Problems in the Middle Register”
(http://www.voiceteacher.com/middle_voice.html ), [Accessed June 14, 2004].
12
voice classification is impossible without properly developed suspensory muscles.”39 The
suspensory muscles assist in stabilization of the larynx. While some singers may be
obviously one voice type from first hearing, others will only reveal their true voice type after
they find the low laryngeal position. Untrained male voices usually break into falsetto when
they approach their secondo passaggio. Less-informed teachers may be tempted to classify
these voices as baritones or basses, only to find out later that they are tenors. Baritones may
be misidentified as tenors if they constantly sing with an elevated larynx because of the lack
of baritonal depth in the tone. With a low laryngeal position, the true identity of that voice
can emerge. Registration events may also be different once a low laryngeal position is
established. With the low laryngeal position, singers will be able to sing with consistent tone
through the registers, and teachers can classify voices more accurately.
Visual appearance, while not necessarily critical, is an important part of singing.
Simply put, the posture required for the lower laryngeal position results in a noble, confident
appearance for the singer. With the neck long, the upper jaw parallel to the ground, the chest
relatively high, and the hips slightly tucked under, one not only provides an optimal scenario
for the low-laryngeal position, but also creates a striking aesthetic appearance. By contrast,
the craning neck, jutting chin, and collapsed chest that frequently accompany the elevated
laryngeal technique will likely give a less favorable visual impression.
Possible Cons
The disadvantages to using the low laryngeal position are insignificant when
compared to the advantages, and they apply only to the time period in which a student is
learning to stabilize the larynx and relinquish old habits. These include the hard work and
time involved in re-training the voice, and in some cases, the emotional hardship of giving up
one’s old sound for a new one.
Since many singers enter their formal study of singing with habits of laryngeal
instability, learning to stabilize the larynx can be an arduous process. This process can be
frustrating, particularly when the singer has already established a vocal identity of which he is
proud. In cases of severe laryngeal tension and elevation, some singers will need to
39
Doscher, Functional Unity of the Singing Voice, 53.
13
completely start over and re-train the voice to stabilize the larynx. Also, establishing the low-
larynx position requires simultaneous coordination of other technical aspects of singing like
breath management and posture. Therefore, some singers may find that they cannot access
the higher parts of the range as quickly when they have not yet established other parts of their
technique. Learning to produce a legitimate pianissimo, particularly in the upper range takes
most singers a long period of time to master with a stable larynx. The result is a superior
tonal quality than the elevated-larynx equivalent, but it requires more time and work to
master. Aside from the hard work involved in stabilizing the larynx and the emotional
difficulty of starting over, the low-larynx technique has no other major disadvantages.
Conclusion
Most modern vocal pedagogues, voice scientists, and speech therapists advocate a
moderately low, stable position in singing and speaking. The benefits attained by using a low
laryngeal position range from superior power and resonance capabilities, to greater vocal
stamina, a richer timbre, more thrilling high notes, blended vocal registers, and even a more
stately visual representation. Disadvantages are minuscule and only relate to the potential
difficulty and effort required in achieving laryngeal stability.
Depressed Larynx
The depressed larynx position occurs when the larynx is purposely pushed lower than
the at-rest position by the base of the tongue and by tucking the chin. Sometimes this type of
laryngeal position has been associated with the German school of singing, typified in the late
nineteenth century teachings of Julius Stockhausen.40 Depressing the larynx will alter the
timbre and resonance of the voice and introduce a thicker configuration of the vocal folds
during phonation.
40
Miller, National Schools of Singing, 85.
14
Perceived Pros
Singing with a depressed laryngeal position elongates the vocal tract and therefore
creates a darker sound. This sound will often seem more resonant to the singer than it is in
reality. Proponents of the depressed-larynx technique often strive for an accompanying yawn
feeling, which opens the pharynx further.41 Titze claims that the “vocal folds are likely to be
thicker...based on the fact that, when the entire larynx is depressed, the tissue inside the
larynx tends to bunch up against the tracheal mucosa.” The large pharynx, combined with
the increased thickness in the vocal folds, produces a fuller sound with a strong fundamental
frequency.42
Cons
Numerous vocal pedagogues warn singers against depressing the larynx because they
view it to be harmful to the voice.43 Titze suggests that using a depressed larynx “can be
more effortful for the vocal folds,” and can cause singers to “run out of pitch range.”44 With
the larynx too low, singers will have a difficult time finding the higher partials in their
resonance, which can disrupt their ability to project their voice optimally. In summary, the
depressed larynx can be harmful to the vocal folds, can limit production of high notes, and
can inhibit higher partials.
Conclusion
The depressed larynx technique provides a full, dark sound with a strong fundamental
frequency, but it can be harmful to the vocal folds and can limit the high range, as well as the
bright resonance that comes from the presence of higher partials. Since this treatise addresses
41
Ibid., 87.
42
Titze, “Raised Versus Lowered Larynx Singing,” 37.
43
Ariel Bybee and James E. Ford, The Modern Singing Master: Essays in Honor of
Cornelius L. Reid (Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press, Inc., 2002), 30; Lucie Manén, Bel Canto:
The Teaching of Classical Italian Song-Schools: Its Decline and Restoration (Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 1987), 49; Brown, Discover Your Voice, 45.
44
Titze, “Raised Versus Lowered Larynx Singing,” 37.
15
the opposite issue of the elevated larynx, no further exploration of depressed larynx singing is
needed here. However, more research on the subject could prove valuable.
Summary
The comfortably low, stable laryngeal position is optimal in classical singing. The
elevated and depressed laryngeal positions can cause vocal strain and inferior results, while
the low laryngeal position provides maximum vocal health, maximum acoustical advantages,
full high notes, and the most favorable tonal qualities.
Teachers and students must be aware of the importance of laryngeal positioning.
They need to know the positive and negative consequences that result from each position in
order to accomplish a high level of competency in classical singing.
16
CHAPTER 2
Teachers need a flexible approach, a more objective terminology, and the ability to teach
singing as a fine motor skill requiring movement pattern recognition, kinesthetic awareness
and memory, and learned sequencing of the component process.45
Voice teachers address laryngeal stability in a variety of ways. Some prefer to avoid
speaking of the laryngeal position at all, opting to focus on releasing tension around the
larynx. Other teachers bring laryngeal position to a conscious level for students in order to
help students understand its importance. Since different singers will benefit from different
approaches to the issue, teachers should be able to adapt their method to the needs of the
individual. This paper provides three approaches to teaching the low laryngeal position
designed to help students with varying degrees of habitual laryngeal elevation. An indirect
approach provides beginning students and most female voices a way to settle the larynx
without over-complicating the issue. A direct approach makes laryngeal position a matter of
consciousness, and it centers on re-training those voices with more serious habits of
instability. A behavioral approach will combine direct and indirect methods of stabilizing
the larynx with principles of behavior modification in order to help students overcome the
most extreme cases of laryngeal elevation. This chapter will include a brief explanation of
each approach, then discuss how to diagnose laryngeal elevation and how to select the proper
approach for a student.
45
Callaghan, “The Singer’s Formant,” 7.
17
Indirect Approach
Many voice teachers already employ several aspects of the indirect approach in their
teaching. Whether or not they use these aspects intentionally to address laryngeal stability is
questionable. The truth is, the position of the larynx can be changed and controlled without
an actual awareness of the larynx’s location. By establishing proper posture, and teaching
students how to breath diaphragmatically, teachers encourage a low laryngeal position.
Teachers who use vocal exercises or imagery to eradicate tension of the tongue, jaw, and
neck are also in essence facilitating a low laryngeal position. If students are able to adopt the
skills of posture, breathing, and relaxing tension within a reasonable time frame, the indirect
approach is preferable. The indirect approach does not require a period of re-training the
voice, so it is easier on both student and teacher. It allows the singer to continue on his
current path of progress without major detours. In the voice studio, where time and efficacy
are essential, the simplest approach (as long as it meets the needs of the student) is usually
best.
Direct Approach
The direct approach to teaching the low laryngeal position requires a conscious
awareness of the location of the larynx at all times. This approach is for use with students
who have an obvious problem with laryngeal instability, and is therefore more focused and
aggressive. The direct approach basically requires the student to start over with his vocal
technique and retrain the intrinsic and extrinsic muscles of the larynx to phonate and change
pitch in a different way. Laryngeal position is discussed and monitored in specific terms
during voice lessons, and exercises are employed with the purpose of stabilizing the larynx in
its comfortably low position. The direct approach utilizes the techniques of the indirect
18
approach, but it adds several other methods geared specifically toward lowering the larynx.
These additional methods include: larynx tracking, primal sounds, and the chewing
method.46 The direct approach is ideal for those students who have studied voice for some
time and have developed a technique around laryngeal elevation rather than correcting their
laryngeal instability.
Behavioral Approach
The behavioral approach to teaching the low laryngeal position utilizes any or all of
the methods described in the indirect and direct approaches, but this approach combines them
with a knowledge and implementation of behavioral techniques. Behavior modification or
behavior management is a field of study and practice that has been used successfully since the
1960s in a variety of settings and disciplines.47 It involves methods designed to help others
change their behaviors by structuring the outcomes or consequences of the targeted
behaviors. Becoming familiar with the most salient behavioral principles will give teachers a
great advantage in the voice studio. Since laryngeal instability can be an extremely difficult
behavior or set of behaviors to change, a practical understanding and application of
behavioral principles will further empower teachers to help students adopt the behaviors
necessary to achieve the low laryngeal position. While behavior principles can and should
influence every stage of teaching, the behavioral method suits the most extreme cases of
laryngeal instability in particular.
46
Larynx tracking: Miller, Training Tenor Voices, 125; David, New Voice Pedagogy,
45. Primal sounds: Brown, Discover Your Voice, 9; Callaghan, “Singer’s Formant,” 7.
Chewing method: David, New Voice Pedagogy, 44.
47
Alan E. Kazdin, Ph.D., History of Behavior Modification: Experimental
Foundations of Contemporary Research (Baltimore: University Park Press, 1978), 7.
19
Selecting an Approach
Teachers should select the approach that will help singers establish the low laryngeal
position most efficiently. When choosing an approach for teaching the low laryngeal
position, teachers may need to hear the singers on more than one occasion. The teacher must
both observe the student’s singing behaviors, and become familiar with the student’s
performing history and length of study. Then the teacher can diagnose the level of laryngeal
instability and find the best approach to establishing proper laryngeal positioning.
While observing the male student during the first few lessons, teachers should note
the following:
1. Is the student’s Adam’s apple easily visible?
2. If so, does it move up and down during singing?
3. How far does the Adam’s apple move during singing? (This will require the
teacher to lightly place a finger on the notch of the thyroid cartilage during
observation.)
4. When does the Adam’s apple ascend/descend? At the onset? As pitch rises?
During inhalation?
5. What is the student’s chin posture during singing? Does it rise or jut out at any
part of the vocal range? Is it tucked inward?
6. Is the back of the neck long and straight or does it appear tense and craned
forward? Can the student sing in all parts of the range with the back of the neck
relaxed?
7. Is inhalation frequently a noisy gasp, or is it silent?
8. Is the chest posture noble and expanded, or does it cave in, and appear apologetic?
9. Does the voice change in quality from low to high?
10. Do high notes sound too open, spread, or yell-like?
11. Does the voice have a consistent ring in the sound?
If the Adam’s apple moves upward noticeably at any point during the singing process
(other than to swallow between phrases), then the student suffers from laryngeal instability.
Minor twitches of movement in the larynx are normal, and can be seen during articulation,
but any upward jumps of the larynx indicate laryngeal instability. Teachers should pay
20
attention to when the larynx moves so that when correcting the problem, they can address the
behavior in context with its antecedents.
If the chin juts forward or raises upward during singing, it may be an indicator of
extrinsic musculature assisting in pitch change by raising the larynx.48 Teachers should note
approximately where in the pitch range the movement of the chin occurs. If the chin is
tucked inward, the problem is more likely a depressed larynx which will receive no further
treatment here.49
If the back of the neck is craned forward or appears tense that is another indicator of
laryngeal instability.50 Students who elevate the larynx have trouble singing higher than their
normal speaking range without tensing the back of the neck. They will continually revert to
poor neck posture as they ascend the scale.
The noisy inhalation can indicate a larynx that flies upward during inhalation,
whereas a quiet breath facilitates a lowering of the larynx.51
A collapsed chest can disrupt the ability of the extrinsic muscles to stabilize the
larynx, whereas a noble chest posture will facilitate laryngeal stabilization.52 A collapsing of
the chest also denotes clavicular breathing, which may help keep the larynx high during
inhalation.
Audible indicators of laryngeal instability may include a significant change in the tone
quality of the voice in different registers, or an open, spread, or yell-like sound. Once the
teacher’s ear becomes adept at recognizing singer’s formant, then the absence of that
formant in the sound can indicate laryngeal instability.
Answering the above questions accurately will equip teachers to address laryngeal
positioning, and select an appropriate approach to teach laryngeal stability.
48
Miller, Training Tenor Voices, 123; idem, National Schools of Singing, 83.
49
Miller, National Schools of Singing, 86.
50
David, The New Voice Pedagogy, 16.
51
Miller, Training Tenor Voices, 126.
52
Manén, Bel Canto, 28.
21
In addition to observing students, teachers should inquire about their student’s past
vocal history. This will help the teacher gauge how long the student has been singing with an
elevated laryngeal position and to what extent the habits have been formed. This information
can be useful when selecting the right approach to teaching the low laryngeal position. The
following sample questions will provide the teacher with helpful insights about the student’s
background:
1. How long have you been studying singing?
2. Have you sung in choirs before, and for how long?
3. What do you like most about your voice?
4. What do you consider your most successful singing moment?
5. What do you think you need to work on vocally?
6. How much time do you spend singing each day?
7. How long can you sing before feeling vocally tired, strained, or hoarse?
After observing a student sing, and discussing the student’s vocal background, a
teacher should be able to assess how serious the case of instability is, and select an approach
to teaching the correct position. The following information should prove helpful in selecting
an approach:
1. The Indirect Approach. This approach is best for milder cases of instability,
evidenced in the following types of students:
a. Singers who have had very little, if any, prior vocal study.
b. Singers who are able to adjust their posture and maintain it immediately while
phonating on a variety of pitches.
c. Female singers. Females who sing classical repertoire tend to exhibit fewer
problems with habitual laryngeal elevation.
d. Singers who only rarely and inconsistently raise the larynx during singing.
e. Singers who exhibit only minor and occasional upward laryngeal movement.
f. Singers who respond with quick results to instruction involving neck, tongue,
and jaw relaxation.
2. The Direct Approach is for singers with moderate to severe cases of laryngeal
instability. Candidates for the direct approach include the following:
22
a. Any male singer whose Adam’s apple regularly rises during phonation or
inspiration.
b. Singers who have been studying voice for more than a year, but still exhibit
the jutting jaw and craning neck.
c. Tenors with a choral background who sound thin and strained in the upper
voice, or lack singer’s formant in combination with any of the usual signs of
laryngeal instability.
3. The Behavioral Approach is for the most severe cases of laryngeal instability.
Candidates for the behavioral approach include:
a. Singers who have already been studying voice and performing (perhaps for
several years) using the elevated laryngeal position.
b. Singers who may have achieved a degree of success and proficiency with their
old technique, but continue to lack ring in the voice. Note: These cases are
harder to diagnose, and may have slipped by other teachers in the past.
Tracking the larynx manually during singing of repertoire that exposes the
secondo passaggio and above, will reveal most problems with laryngeal
elevation. It is also helpful to listen to the singer with an orchestra or in a
large space to judge if the voice has sufficient resonance and presence in the
space.
Summary
While none of the three approaches will harm the student if done correctly, an
efficient teacher will not want to spend valuable studio time on a detailed process when the
issue can be solved by an easier approach. The direct and behavioral approaches involve a
vocal overhaul and are appropriate for students with more severe habits of laryngeal
instability. The indirect approach can be used with beginners as well as those who have
23
established a good basic vocal technique but only occasionally exhibit minor laryngeal
instability. The next three chapters will present each of the three approaches in detail.
24
CHAPTER 3
Most teachers who are aware of the importance of a low laryngeal position approach
the subject indirectly. Perhaps they prefer this approach because, as Callaghan suggests, “A
conscious control of the larynx is seen by many teachers as impossible or undesirable.”53
Whatever the reason, teachers tend either to ignore laryngeal positioning entirely, or to focus
on other aspects of vocal technique that will produce a stabilized larynx inadvertently. In
fact, without actually focusing on the larynx by speaking of it specifically, or physically
touching the area, laryngeal position can be addressed. Confronting the issue of laryngeal
position in this way is called the indirect approach.
The indirect approach centers on establishing good singing posture and diaphragmatic
breathing, and releasing tension of the tongue, jaw, and neck in order to allow the larynx to
relax into its comfortably low position. By focusing on these basic issues, many, if not most
singers, will find laryngeal stability. This chapter includes a brief description of the extrinsic
musculature of the larynx followed by a discussion of several methods and exercises geared
toward lowering the laryngeal position without directly focusing on the larynx.
Extrinsic Muscles
The group of muscles known as the extrinsic muscles of the larynx plays an important
role in classical singing. The extrinsic muscles are those muscles of the tongue, jaw, and
53
Callaghan, “The Singer’s Formant,” 7.
25
neck areas that connect to the larynx but originate outside of the larynx.54 In singing with a
low laryngeal position, the extrinsic muscles (particularly those that originate in the neck
area) should play an important role in keeping the larynx in place. Miller notes, “If the
external-frame function of the neck (the supportive musculature of the larynx) is kept in
dynamic muscle balance, the larynx will remain well-poised throughout the vocal scale.”55
Unfortunately, singers who are prone to laryngeal elevation tend to use the extrinsic muscles
to raise the larynx as a way to accommodate the necessary elongation of the vocal folds in
pitch change, instead of the intrinsic muscles. This causes undue strain upon the cords and,
as discussed previously, results in a markedly inferior sound. According to Brown, Lamperti
understood the role of extrinsic muscles when he said, “Only when the external muscular
envelope of the whole body acts as a unit, can the internal muscles of the voice,
untrammeled, function.”56 The extrinsic muscles commonly divide into two groups: those
that originate above the larynx (supralaryngeals), and those that originate below the larynx
(infralaryngeals). McKinney notes, “As a general rule, those [muscles] that originate above
the larynx pull up on it, and those that originate below pull down on it.”57 The two groups of
muscles should work antagonistically with each other so as to achieve an equilibrium that
stabilizes the larynx. Doscher describes the stabilizing effect of the extrinsic muscles, as well
as the benefits of that stability in pitch change:
An understanding of the part each muscle plays in the suspensory mechanism cannot
be overemphasized. If the sterno-thyroid primary depressor works antagonistically
with the thyro-hyoid primary elevator, the larynx stays in a steady, median position.
As a result, the space in the pharynx is increased and undesirable tongue tension
avoided. Cooperation between the sterno-thyroid and crico-thyroid helps the latter
stretch the vocal folds more gently and efficiently. The stylopharyngeal system,
working on the horns of the thyroid cartilage, stretches the cords further for high
voice singing, and in this same system contributes to the widening of the pharyngeal
cavity. 58
54
Vennard, Singing: The Mechanism and the Technic, 247.
55
Miller, Traning Tenor Voices, 125.
56
Brown, Vocal Wisdom, 41.
57
McKinney, Diagnosis and Correction of Vocal Faults, 74.
58
Doscher, The Functional Unity of the Singing Voice, 53.
26
When the extrinsic muscles perform the function of stabilizing the larynx instead of elevating
it, the low laryngeal position is achieved.
Teachers can implement the indirect approach to establishing the low laryngeal
position by using the following approaches: diaphragmatic (appoggio) breathing, posture,
elimination of tongue and jaw tension, and imagery. Each of these approaches has validity on
its own, but most students will require a combination of most or all of the following
suggestions.
The larynx naturally descends into its comfortably low position during a quiet,
diaphragmatic inhalation. Therefore, focusing on proper inhalation is an effective way to
begin to establish a low laryngeal position. Damsté discussed this phenomenon as
paraphrased by David:
A diaphragmatic breath will lower the larynx at least temporarily. The diaphragm’s
contraction exerts a downward pull on the bronchial tree which pulls the front of the
cricoid cartilage down. This gives resistence to any upward pull on the cricoid or
thyroid cartilages by intrinsic muscles. It also shortens the vocal folds, which reduces
shrillness. The downward pull is greatest at the point of full inspiration.59
The above quotation suggests that with the descent of the diaphragm, which accompanies a
proper inhalation, comes a natural lowering of the larynx. This lowered position is the
correct position for the larynx in singing. After using inhalation to facilitate a low laryngeal
position through diaphragmatic breathing, the singer must learn to maintain the same position
during phonation at all pitch levels. The muscular antagonism involved in maintaining the
inhalatory position is characteristic of the appoggio method of breath management. When
the student begins to notice the sensations, or lack thereof, in the throat that are created by a
59
David, The New Voice Pedagogy, 39.
27
correct diaphragmatic inhalation, they should then be taught to regard those sensations as
“home base” for all their singing.
Posture
Along with breathing, posture plays an important part in establishing the low
laryngeal position. By keeping the head, neck, and torso in a noble alignment, the extrinsic
muscles are more likely to function as laryngeal stabilizers, therefore encouraging the low-
larynx position.60 In particular, the neck must be long and straight in the back, so that no
craning or hunching occurs. The upper jaw should be kept parallel to the floor. The chest
must be held in a confident, noble position. In using the indirect approach, teachers must
emphasize posture consistently in order to establish the low laryngeal position.
When students begin to breathe diaphragmatically and establish correct posture, they
should be on their way toward laryngeal stability. However, usually singers will need to
address tension of the tongue, jaw, and neck as well to truly establish the low laryngeal
position.
The Tongue
Of the extrinsic muscles, those that comprise the tongue tend to have the largest
influence upon singing. Doscher explains why the tongue wields such an influence:
60
Miller, Traning Tenor Voices, 125.
28
The tongue occupies almost the entire vocal tract since it is fastened posteriorly to the
hyoid bone, the epiglottis, and the soft palate. Effective resonation depends on
learning voluntary control of this large, and often unruly complex.61
Since the tongue is made up of several different layers of muscle, it is capable of changing
shape from “round and thick like a sausage” to “flattened, but twisting sideways.”62
Optimally, the tip of the tongue should rest at the back of the bottom incisors during the
singing of all vowels, and it should remain as relaxed as possible within the demands that
vowel and consonant articulation require.63 Teachers should observe the motions of the
student’s tongue during singing and note the following:
1. Does the tongue pull back into the mouth and away from the teeth?
2. Does the tongue appear to be pushed forward into the roots of the teeth?
3. Does the tongue bunch up in the middle?
4. Do the sides of the tongue curve upward?
5. Does the tip of the tongue raise upward?64
If the tongue does any of the above, then it is likely interfering with laryngeal positioning
and/or vocal freedom, and some correction is in order.
The following three ways are effective in helping singers correct tongue tension:
mirror work, use of certain consonant/vowel combinations, and tongue extension exercises.
Teachers should inform students about appropriate tongue positioning, and then insist
that the student utilize a mirror during practice to monitor the tongue’s movements: “It is a
good idea for singers to practice all kinds of tongue movements before a mirror, to bring it
under conscious control.”65 By looking in the mirror singers can see when the tongue creeps
back away from the teeth, or if it acquires any of the other negative positions or shapes
previously discussed. With patience, students can form correct tongue habits simply by using
a mirror in the practice room.
61
Doscher, The Functional Unity of the Singing Voice, 113-14.
62
Vennard, Singing: The Mechanism and the Technic, 112.
63
Ibid., 110.
64
Miller, Training Tenor Voices, 123-24.
65
Vennard, Singing: The Mechanism and the Technic, 111.
29
Several consonants tend to put the tongue into the desirable singing position. These
include: [v], [f], [t], [d], and the unvoiced []. Miller recommends initializing vocalizations
with the consonant [v] to help students become aware of the correct position of the tongue.66
The [v], [f], [t], and [d] phonemes naturally prompt the tongue to rest at the teeth without
undue tension.67 Doscher recommends initiating vowels with the unvoiced [] because it
keeps the tongue from retracting and loosens the back of the tongue.68 Simple exercises that
begin each syllable with these consonants will slowly bring the tongue into submission:
These kinds of exercises help the tongue respond loosely and naturally. They are not
spectacular or even different. They do not get quick results, but they are effective and
they do not substitute another problem for the one they are trying to solve.69
Teachers can also help singers train the tongue by emphasizing the proper tongue
positions for each vowel. David recommends using the vowel [I] in combination with open
vowels like [a] to “free the tongue from the jaw.”70 Using the tongue position created in [I]
or [i] vowels and alternately “melting” into the open vowels while keeping the tongue
relatively forward will guard against the retracting tongue that so often occurs with open
vowels. Sometimes, a shift in tonal focus is necessary when addressing tongue position.71
When singers learn to accept a more forward, or frontal, tone quality, they will need the tip of
the tongue in its correct position behind the lower incisors. Another use of vowels consists of
singing an [a] vowel with the tip of the tongue outside the mouth.72 This type of exercise will
discourage tension near the back of the tongue.
Tongue extension exercises may also help in releasing tongue tension. The first
exercise is executed by simply placing the tongue out as far as it will go comfortably,
66
Miller, Training Tenor Voices, 124.
67
Ibid.; David, New Voice Pedagogy, 49.
68
Doscher, Functional Unity of the Singing Voice, 115.
69
Ibid.
70
David, New Voice Pedagogy, 49.
71
Ibid.
72
Ibid., 48.
30
followed by drawing it back quickly. The second exercise is accomplished by hooking the tip
of the tongue behind the lower incisors, then rolling the hump of the tongue gently forward,
and returning to the at rest position.73 At the very least, tongue extensions will help singers
bring the tongue under control, but some authorities feel that extending the tongue produces a
more relaxed tongue.74
Though the tongue can be unruly, gradually singers will bring it into submission by
using the mirror, consonant and vowel relationships, and tongue extension exercises.
The Jaw
Many singers suffer from tension in the jaw. Jaw tension tends to accompany other
vocal problems, particularly the elevated larynx. Doscher notes a correlation between jaw
tension and poor breathing and posture:
Tightness of the jaw often is caused by other functional tensions. For instance, if
breathing is clavicular, the extrinsic muscular network is deactivated. As a result the
larynx rides too high, the root of the tongue is tense, the jaw is tight, and pharyngeal
space is constricted.75
In any case, tension of the jaw appears when needed to compensate for a deficiency
elsewhere. Teachers often address the jaw from two standpoints: freedom and position.
Those that emphasize jaw freedom claim that “jaw position is not nearly so important as
freedom of the hinge or mandibular joint.”76 Others like Miller, go further and note that the
jaw should not acquire the following four positions:
73
Doscher, Functional Unity of the Singing Voice, 115.
74
Vennard, Singing: The Mechanism and the Technic, 111.
75
Doscher, Functional Unity of the Singing Voice, 121-22.
76
Ibid., 121.
31
1. The jaw is dropped too far.
2. The jaw is not opened sufficiently for the required phonetic postures.
3. The jaw is thrust forward.
4. The jaw is thrust upward.77
In reality, both jaw freedom and jaw position interconnect and must be addressed in order to
eradicate laryngeal elevation. Three basic strategies will assist teachers in eliminating jaw
tension: mirror work, manual jaw tracking, and jaw wiggling.
As with tongue tension, looking in the mirror can do much to bring singers to an
awareness of jaw tension. When looking in the mirror, singers should note, in particular, if
the jaw juts or the chin rises. Also any jaw clenching should be noted. For many students,
the awareness created by viewing themselves in a mirror will initiate a correction of jaw
tension.
Tensions tend to creep into the body without the singer noticing. Jaw tension is no
exception. By tracking the jaw with one’s hand, a singer will create a kinesthetic awareness
of the jaw tension, which will encourage jaw freedom. David recommends lightly placing a
hand against the cheek or chin while singing in order to alert the singer to jaw tension and
movement.78 Miller advocates:
Lightly rest the chin in the curve of the forefinger and thumb, with the butt of the
hand resting on the chest (or on the other arm positioned across the chest, if the singer
is flat chested). Any tendency to move the chin forward or upward with mounting
pitch will be noted.79
Some speech therapists are more aggressive when dealing with jaw tension. They propose
physically moving the jaw with the hand during phonation. Brodnitz recommends shaking
the jaw from side to side with the mouth slightly open while phonating on a neutral vowel.80
77
Miller, Training Tenor Voices, 124.
78
David, New Voice Pedagogy, 20.
79
Miller, Training Tenor Voices, 125.
80
Friedrich S. Brodnitz, M.D., Vocal Rehabilitation, 3d ed. (Rochester, MN: Custom
Printing, Inc., 1965), 161.
32
McClosky adds moving the jaw up and down with the hands.81 If teachers and singers choose
to use this more aggressive approach, they should bear in mind that any movement of the jaw
must be done gently and smoothly so as not to hurt the jaw mechanism or create further
tensions.
Another way to alleviate jaw tension is to wiggle the jaw while singing. Again,
Miller provides an excellent description:
Mild, lateral movement of the jaw in small, quick motions during a sustained single
pitch, then stopping the jaw action while continuing to sing the tone, often informs
the singer where jaw tension lies.82
By moving the jaw in these delicate motions, the jaw muscles will not be able to contract
fully and produce the tension.
In summary, freedom of the jaw is an important part of establishing the low laryngeal
position. By using a mirror, physically tracking the jaw, and wiggling the jaw singers can
reduce or eliminate jaw tension.
The Neck
In optimal singing, neck muscles must perform the function of stabilizing the larynx;
however, when the wrong neck muscles contract and become tense, they will assist in the
elevation of the larynx. Therefore, neck tension must often be addressed when striving for
laryngeal stability. Good posture will solve most neck problems, but mirror work and mild
neck motions during singing will also alleviate neck tension.
81
D. B. McClosky, “General Techniques and Specific Procedures for Certain Voice
Problems,” In Approaches to Vocal Rehabilitation, ed. M. Cooper and M. H. Cooper
(Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas, 1977), 139-41.
82
Miller, Training Tenor Voices, 124.
33
If a singer establishes optimal posture, then unwanted neck tension is not likely to
appear. By holding the head in its noble position with the back of the neck long, and the
upper jaw parallel to the floor, the muscles of the neck will act to stabilize the larynx.83
Therefore, good posture is the best medicine for neck tension.
When singers are unaware of their posture and neck tension, mirrors are again
valuable. To see the back of the neck, singers should use two mirrors and position them so
that the back of the neck is visible. This will bring neck tension into consciousness and help
singers address their tension.
Shaking the head from side to side while singing is another way to address neck
tension. Singers should sing a sustained note while shaking and bobbling the head gently,
and then stop moving the head and continue singing while maintaining the same ease in the
neck. This way singers can be trained to recognize the appropriate amount of freedom in the
neck muscles.
Neck tension can cause laryngeal elevation, so teachers and singers must be aware of
them and address them when needed as a part of the indirect approach to teaching laryngeal
stability.
Imagery
Imagery is another tool that can be used to address laryngeal position indirectly.
Without literally describing the anatomical process of singing with a low larynx, teachers can
use evocative terms and descriptions that will stimulate the proper physical response of
singing with a low laryngeal position. Two common images useful in lowering the larynx
include the “incipient yawn” and “drinking in the breath.”
83
Ibid., 125.
34
The “incipient yawn” is an image used frequently in vocal pedagogy. Vennard and
McKinney are among the many proponents of the incipient yawn image. Consider the
following:
The beginning-of-a-yawn position is ideal for singing and should be cultivated. The
full yawn position is exaggeratedly low and should be avoided; it is known as the
depressed larynx.84
McKinney goes on to describe the four primary benefits of singing while maintaining
the incipient yawn position:
1. Opens the pathway for a noiseless and almost effortless taking in of air;
2. Positions larynx in a comfortably low position, without tensing to do so;
3. Increases the size of the throat, especially in the vertical dimension, by lowering
the larynx, gently lifting the soft palate, and relaxing the constrictor muscles of the
pharyngeal wall;
4. Relaxes the muscles controlling the articulators, thus freeing them for action.85
Vennard developed a now widely adopted group of exercises he called the “yawn-
sigh” based on combining the incipient yawn image with sighing on pitch.86 The yawn
sensation lowers the larynx, while the sigh encourages free phonation. For beginners,
Vennard recommended a descending five-note scale beginning with a soft dynamic and a
light production and increasing in dynamics while descending in pitch. The tone should be
both clear and light. As the student becomes more technically advanced, the exercise can be
modified by adding an ascending five-note scale in the same breath while reversing the
dynamics, creating a messa di voce.
The “drinking in the breath” image accomplishes something similar to the incipient
yawn. If one asks a student to breathe in air as if drinking a glass of water, the larynx should
relax into its low position and the palate will rise. This image will facilitate the low laryngeal
position without addressing the larynx directly.
84
McKinney, Diagnosis and Correction of Vocal Faults, 130.
85
Ibid., 131.
86
Vennard, Singing: The Mechanism and the Technic, 213.
35
Summary
Many voice teachers already use the methods described as the indirect approach to
teaching laryngeal stability. The above methods are used because they work well for many
students. By establishing proper diaphragmatic (appoggio) breathing and good posture,
alleviating tension of the tongue, jaw, and neck, and using imagery, laryngeal position can be
stabilized in singing. The indirect approach will be particularly useful with female voices,
and beginners. For most necktie tenors, and male voices who have developed habits of
frequent laryngeal elevation, the indirect approach will not be aggressive enough to re-train
the muscles for the low laryngeal position. However, the knowledge and principles that
comprise the indirect approach apply to most students.
36
CHAPTER 4
What can you trust? Your primal sound! Get to know it. Find out who you are. Explore!
Experiment! Release old habits to make way for the new.87
The direct approach to teaching laryngeal stability is based on the idea that one can
correct issues of laryngeal instability by bringing the larynx under conscious control. Instead
of only focusing on extrinsic tensions as in the indirect approach, the direct approach centers
all initial efforts on knowing the location of the larynx. Two main devices accomplish this
purpose: larynx tracking and primal sounds. A third device known as chewing therapy will
apply in select cases. After explaining the overall philosophy of the direct approach, this
chapter will discuss larynx tracking, primal sounds, and chewing therapy, and present a four-
step process by which singers can establish the low laryngeal position with the direct
approach.
As discussed previously, the direct approach is for singers who have made laryngeal
elevation a central part of their vocal technique. Some of these singers may have managed to
disguise their technical fault for years, and even achieve some success in school or
87
Brown, Discover Your Voice, 4.
37
professional venues. This will commonly include the proverbial necktie tenor. These singers
are often marked by their inconsistency as they flail through the passaggio and find their way
into the top voice. The philosophy behind the direct approach is that with extreme cases of
habitual laryngeal instability, laryngeal positioning should become the primary technical
concern addressed. Once the larynx is stable, one can solve, or begin to solve most other
technical deficiencies. Laryngeal position wields great influence upon issues of resonance,
registration, breathing, posture, placement, and articulation. Therefore, it is almost fruitless
for singers with serious laryngeal instability to pursue those issues before addressing
laryngeal position. Once the low position becomes habitual, the foundation is set to address
other technical issues properly.
Since the direct approach is remedial, it requires singers to completely discard their
old vocal technique in order to rid themselves of the many crutches which accompany
laryngeal elevation. This includes foregoing any performing opportunities until the problem
no longer exists. It is similar to conquering any other habit or addiction - the individual must
avoid situations that will make the addiction more difficult to overcome. For the direct
approach to be effective, the singer must fully understand the need for the change, believe
that the new technique will yield better results than the current technique, and have a
determination to solve the problem. With those ingredients in place, teachers will be able to
utilize the direct approach successfully.
Larynx Tracking
38
conclusive way for students and teachers to assess the laryngeal position. When locating the
larynx for larynx tracking, teachers must be sure that the student is touching the thyroid
cartilage and not simply a bump on the trachea. Vigilant use of larynx tracking in
conjunction with singing and speaking exercises should occur until the student forms habits
of laryngeal stability. Vennard utilized larynx tracking in his teaching:
I believe in having them [the students] place a finger on the Adam’s apple to locate it,
and then notice how it drops as they inhale diaphragmatically. The whole thing
becomes an advanced breathing exercise and emphasizes the importance of correct
respiration. I also ask them to sing still feeling the protuberance of the thyroid
cartilage, to notice whether it pops up as soon as phonation begins. With practice
they learn how to ‘breathe a tone right back out’ without raising the larynx, or at least
without raising it as much.88
The singular goal when beginning the direct approach should be for the singer to discover
which sounds he or she can make without the larynx rising. Until solved, this becomes the all
important aim of every practice session and every lesson. Any phonation that includes a
rising of the larynx should be avoided. As with smoking or drinking or any other difficult
habit, the best way to quit is “cold turkey.” In this case, that means eliminating the old
manner of phonating which relies on laryngeal elevation. The best way to begin this process
is to utilize larynx tracking, so that the singer becomes conscious of the position of the
larynx. Some singers may also benefit from tilting the head forward so that the chin is
slightly tucked in. This tuck will help keep the larynx low, but it must only be a temporary
crutch, since it can cause a depressed larynx position. By tracking the movements of the
larynx, singers will begin to bring the larynx under conscious control.
Primal Sounds
Oren Brown has coined the term “primal sound” as it applies to singing. Primal
sounds are those sounds that humans tend to make instinctively as emotional responses.
88
Vennard, Singing: The Mechanism and the Technic, 109.
39
“We humans, like all animals, create sound to express our various states and needs. These
sounds are involuntary; they spring from our emotions.” Brown goes on to say, “Primal
sound...is the sound you make without thinking when, for example, you are amused or
startled, or enraged.”89 One purpose of using primal sounds is that when one discovers his
primal sound, he will most likely also find the proper, low laryngeal position. Callaghan
wrote:
There seems no reason why the fine laryngeal control used intuitively in many
physiological functions such as laughing, crying, and yawning should not be brought
under conscious control for producing singer’s formant. These affective expressions
achieve an instinctive balance between breath management, adjustment of the
articulators, and laryngeal action.90
The primal sound method distances the singer from sounds they previously associated with
singing, allowing them to find alternative noises that are more healthy and natural. In the
direct method to achieving laryngeal stability, primal sounds should comprise the entirety of
the singer’s phonation until they can sing about an octave with a stable laryngeal position. At
first, the student must be told not to sing at all outside of lessons until further notice. When
the teacher feels that the student can consistently demonstrate a healthy, low laryngeal
position with primal sounds, then the student should practice for fifteen or twenty minutes a
day using primal sounds only.
Brown often began the primal sound process by having singers say “uh-huh.”91 This
neutral and natural response to a question usually provokes a low laryngeal position. Brown
believed that the neutral vowel of “uh” should be the basis of phonation.92 Other primal
sounds should include laughs, cries, moans, and sighs. The student must be told not to try to
associate these sounds with sounding good or singing at all. In fact, the sounds should at first
be ugly and unstable. When the student realizes that the teacher does not expected him to
make a beautiful sound, he will hopefully relax and dare to experiment with primal sounds.
Teachers should make sure that these sounds are produced in a relaxed, spontaneous manner.
89
Brown, Discover Your Voice, 2.
90
Callaghan, “The Singer’s Formant,” 7.
91
Brown, Discover Your Voice, 42; Miller, Training Tenor Voices, 123.
92
Brown, Discover Your Voice, 42.
40
Students must not experience any muscular sensations in the throat while making primal
sounds. If the teacher observes any physical straining, or manifestations of effort in the face,
neck, jaw, or lips, then using a mirror will help ensure relaxation. The goal is to make any
kind of sound at all that is free of tension and emanates from a stable, low larynx. If this
means that the sounds are breathy, or otherwise unattractive for a while, that is fine.
In the beginning, the primal sounds should be concentrated in the low-middle area of
the vocal range to avoid any vocal strain or difficulty finding the desired laryngeal position.
The student should track the position of the larynx while making primal sounds, paying close
attention to any sensations (or lack thereof) in the throat. Most students will be able to find at
least a small part of the voice where primal sounds can be made with very little tension and
with the larynx in its comfortably low position. As the student becomes adept at maintaining
a low laryngeal position with primal sounds in a limited range, the teacher should encourage
excursions throughout the middle range. Alternating vowels while making primal sounds,
especially the neutral vowel [ā], or [o] and [u] will help maintain the low laryngeal position.
Pitch slides in conjunction with primal sounds are an excellent way to train the intrinsic
muscles to change pitch with a stationary laryngeal position. Assuming the student has
already successfully formed the rudimentary skills of breath support, pitch slides done in the
manner of a cried and/or sighed tone will develop the ability of the intrinsic muscles to
control pitch without the pressure of having specific pitch requirements. The teacher may
find it helpful to demonstrate these sounds a few times in order for the student to know what
types of sounds to expect, and to help the student feel less inhibited.
Over time, as the student begins to adopt the lower laryngeal position, the teacher can
guide the student through the primo passaggio into the area of the secondo passaggio. At
first the idea is to help the student discover how to make any sound at all in that area of the
voice without elevating the larynx to do so. At that point, the sound can be breathy and thin
as long as the throat is relatively free and the larynx stays down. Eventually, as the teacher
notes a level of consistency, an increase in breath energy combined with a raising of the soft
palate and maintenance of a neutral or dark vowel will allow the student to make primal
sounds up through the passaggio and into the top voice. As the student gains the ability to
sing through the zona di passaggio using neutral vowels, the teacher can introduce the
concept of aggiustamento, or vowel modification. By slightly altering all vowels towards the
41
[ā] position in the notes preceding and including the secondo passsaggio, the larynx can
remain in the low position. Using aggiustamento in conjunction with primal sounds will help
the student become more adept at keeping the larynx in the correct position.
The primal sound should become a key technical device in the new vocal technique
that is founded upon a stable, low laryngeal position. By utilizing primal sounds, singers will
discover that their vocal folds are capable of approximating in a different way, that is, they
can change pitch without negative tension in the tongue, neck, and jaw.
93
Brodnitz, Vocal Rehabilitation, 144.
94
David, New Voice Pedagogy, 45.
95
Ibid.; Miller, Training Tenor Voices, 124.
42
voice disorders.”96 The method described below transfers the uses of the chewing method
from the speech therapy clinic into the voice studio in order to promote the low laryngeal
position.
When people chew food, they utilize the tongue and jaw in coordinated motion.
Generally, chewing produces a certain freedom from muscular tension in the jaw, tongue, and
throat, which is desirable in singing. Boone also claims that the chewing method will
“promote more optimum vocal fold size/mass adjustments.”97 Such adjustments in the vocal
folds are part of the changes that need to take place when going from a raised larynx, which
typically uses a pressed phonation, to the low larynx, which uses a balanced phonation.
Through the use of the following process, teachers can utilize the natural benefits of
chewing motions to relax the speaking and singing voices. First, explain to the student that
they are speaking and singing with unnecessary tension, and temporarily they will be using a
method that involves exaggerated chewing motions to relieve that tension. Student and
teacher sit before a mirror, and the teacher has the student look in to the mirror and open the
mouth as if to bite into a stack of crackers (use real crackers if necessary). Have the student
pretend to chew the crackers for several minutes, while pointing out in the mirror the mouth
opening and jaw movement. Then demonstrate chewing with soft eating noises, and have the
student imitate. Make sure that the tongue is moving naturally as in chewing. As this
becomes natural, have the student add some words to the chewing. Find words that they can
say easily while doing the chewing motions. When the student is adept at using words, have
them count from one to ten. Have them practice this, then record the exercise and play it
back for the student. When they have mastered the counting exercise, have the student
practice reading a passage out of a book while using the chewing motions. Eventually, hold
conversations with the student while they use the chewing motions. Encourage the student to
practice this with people at home who will be supportive of the exercise. As the student
becomes skilled at finding healthy phonation with a relaxed tongue and jaw, and
consequently larynx, have the student gradually diminish the exaggerated chewing motions
96
Daniel R. Boone, The Voice and Voice Therapy (Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey:
Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1977), 123.
97
Ibid., 120.
43
while maintaining the same relaxed feeling in the throat by simply thinking the chewing
method.98 When the student can speak well by thinking of the method, voice teachers can
move the singer from speech to prolonged speech and singing by using primal sounds.
Adding larynx tracking will ensure the proper laryngeal position. By using the chewing
method, singers with heavy tension in the tongue and jaw can eliminate tension and find the
relaxed larynx position needed in good singing.
The direct approach can be broken down into four steps. First, the teacher must
confront the singer with the facts about their laryngeal instability. Then the student must find
the comfortably low laryngeal position in a portion of the vocal range. Third, the student and
teacher work on expanding the singer’s range. Finally, the student can return to his repertoire
and implement the new laryngeal position.
98
Chewing Method Steps: Boone, Voice and Voice Therapy, 120-23.
44
book Great Singers on Great Singing by Jerome Hines. Here Marilyn Horne, Sherrill
Milnes, Franco Corelli, Nicolai Gedda, Luciano Pavarotti, Placido Domingo, and others
comment on the importance of singing with a low laryngeal position. Singers will find it
hard to argue with Corelli when he says, “There’s no other way” than to sing with the larynx
low,99 or with Marilyn Horne when she says:
I think, in breathing correctly, your larynx goes down automatically, you’re already in
a position for singing, so that you’re not singing with a raised larynx. Then of course,
the higher you go, the lower the larynx has got to go.100
While the statements in Hines’s book are often empirical and given to imagery, there is an
obvious consensus that the larynx must remain comfortably low during singing. Singers in
Hines’s book also refer multiple times to the importance of posture and breathing as they
relate to the low larynx, and the images of the incipient yawn and drinking in the breath are
also present. These statements and others like them, in conjunction with videos, recordings,
and pedagogical literature will help to convince students of the importance of the low
laryngeal position.
99
Jerome Hines, Great Singers on Great Singing (New York: Limelight Editions,
1995), 59.
100
Ibid., 136.
45
Teachers must reinforce correct posture and breathing concurrently to ensure that the
new sounds generate from proper breath support and body alignment to provide the structural
support needed to stabilize the low larynx. During this time of experimentation, sounds
made by the student will seem strange and far removed from their concept of what a beautiful
tone should be. To help this issue, students should record their lessons, so they can
appreciate their new sound as it begins to develop.
In special cases, where the singer has difficulty phonating at all without a raised
laryngeal position, introduce chewing therapy until the singer can perpetuate the low
laryngeal position.
46
This will help students maximize the benefits of the low larynx by training the vocal cords to
approximate and phonate clearly and efficiently.
Summary
Despite hesitancy on the part of some voice teachers to address larynx positioning
directly, major pedagogues including Vennard, Miller, and David have found it useful to
bring the larynx into conscious control. For singers who constantly sing with an elevated
larynx, a direct approach may be their only redemption. Based on the empirical evidence of
the author and the pedagogical writings included here, using larynx tracking, primal sounds,
and the chewing method in the suggested steps above, should result in laryngeal stability.
47
CHAPTER 5
101
R. Douglas Greer, Design for Music Learning (New York: Teachers College Press,
1980), 28.
102
Ibid., 1.
48
Behavior Modification
Behavior modification is a term used to identify a wide variety of ideas and methods
developed to address different human behavior issues. Some definitions of behavior
modification include the following:
• The management of behavior through the manipulation of the environment.
• Treatment techniques derived from theories of learning and aimed at the direct
modification of one or more problem behaviors.103
While people have always been concerned with issues of behavior, the field known as
behavior modification is relatively new. Mikulas claims, “The first major statement of a
behaviorist position was that of Watson in 1913.”104 However, the study of behavior has only
been popular since the late 1960s, and has subsequently been the basis for much study and
research.105 The application of behavior modification techniques has been particularly
successful in dealing with learning disabled children, autistic children, emotionally disturbed
children, and classroom behavior problems.106 Behavior modification is highly adaptable in
many situations and problem areas because the basic principles of behavior apply easily to
most settings.107 Behavior studies readily apply to musical scenarios such as teaching music
in the classroom and in choral settings.108 However, little has been written to apply behavior
103
James A. Poteet, Behavior Modification; A Practical Guide for Teachers
(Minneapolis, MN: Burgess Publishing Co., 1973), 23.
104
William L. Mikulas, Behavior Modification (New York: Harper & Row,
Publishers, 1978), 6.
105
Greer, Design for Music Learning, 17.
106
Roger D. Klein, Walter G. Hapkiewicz, and Aubrey H. Roden, Behavior
Modification in Educational Settings (Springfield, IL: Thomas Publishing, 1973), 540.
107
Mikulas, Behavior Modification, 2.
108
Clifford K. Madsen and Carol A. Prickett, Applications of Research in Music
Behavior (Tuscaloosa, AL: University of Alabama Press, 1987); Greer, Design for Music
Learning.
49
principles specifically to voice teaching. In fact, the majority of literature on vocal pedagogy
focuses more on the scientific aspects of singing than to the art of teaching voice or the skills
involved in communicating with students.109 Teaching laryngeal stability to “necktie tenors”
and other voices provides an ideal vocal setting for applying behavior principles because it
involves supplanting difficult negative vocal habits with more effective vocal habits.
Behavior modification is not the cure-all answer to voice teaching or any other
discipline. Limitations include the potential misuse of behavior principles resulting in power
struggles between students and teachers.110 However, exposure to behavior principles can
give teachers tools that, if used with intelligence and sensitivity, can only improve their
success.
Behavior Principles
Before applying behavioral principles to teaching the low laryngeal position, the
reader should become acquainted with basic behavioral theory and some of its principles.
The next few pages will introduce the ABC’s of behavior, methods for increasing and
decreasing behaviors, and an assortment of behavioral tools applicable in the vocal setting.
When considering behaviors, the simple template commonly referred to in behavioral
circles as the “ABC’s” is helpful: “A” stands for antecedent, “B” stands for behavior, and
“C” signifies consequence.
109
Robert Michael Peavler, “Identification and Use of Learning Styles in the
Collegiate Applied Voice Studio,” (Ph.D. diss., Florida State University, 2000), 1-2.
110
Klein, Hapkiewicz, and Roden, Behavior Modification in Educational Settings,
543.
50
The antecedent represents “the situation or conditions that exist before or
immediately preceding a behavior.”111 Teachers must evaluate antecedents in singing
behaviors so they can adapt their instruction to specific behavioral needs. For example, if a
teacher knows that a student tends to raise his larynx when faced with large interval skips
into the high voice, the teacher will be able to adjust vocal exercises to address that issue.
A behavior constitutes “anything a person does, says, [or sings] that can be observed
or measured.”112 Singing behaviors range from the subtlest sounds and movements to overt
physical motions. Teachers must develop the ability to isolate and identify behaviors and
understand the implications associated with those targeted behaviors. Vague descriptions of
what a student does, such as, “That phrase sounded thin and weak,” will not be very helpful
to students; instead, the teacher can identify a specific behavior to change such as, “I noticed
during that phrase your chin elevated just before you sang the high A.”
People usually associate the term consequence to mean some sort of punishment, but
in this context a consequence is simply anything that happens directly as a result of a given
behavior. Consequences can be positive, negative, or neutral. Greer states:
Regardless of whether the behavior is appropriate or inappropriate, or whether the
behavior increases, decreases, or stays the same, it is the consequences of the behavior
that determine its rate and direction.113
Voice teachers should use a variety of consequences, also called reinforcers, in the studio in
order to influence their students to become better singers.114
The following table contains examples of the ABC’s of behavior in an applied voice
context:
111
Jerry Davis, Ph.D. and Daniel L. Daly, Ph.D., Girls and Boys Town: Long-Term
Residential Program Training Manual, 4th ed. (Boys Town, NE: Father Flanagan’s Boys’
Home, Inc., 2003), 57.
112
Ibid., 59.
113
Greer, Design for Music Learning, 45.
114
Poteet, Behavior Modification; A Practical Guide, 29.
51
TABLE 1
ABC’S OF BEHAVIOR
115
Greer, Design for Music Learning, 46.
116
Poteet, Behavior Modification; A Practical Guide, 30.
117
Davis and Daly, Girls and Boys Town, 64-65.
52
Immediacy. Immediacy is an important part of effective positive reinforcement.
This means that teachers must respond immediately to a student’s positive vocal behavior
with a positive reinforcer. Mikulas claims, “As a general rule, you get the best results if the
reinforcement occurs right after the behavior.”118 The more time that elapses between the
good behavior and the reinforcer, the less effective the reinforcement.119 Teachers who give
immediate approval the moment a singer exhibits a proper behavior will be more successful.
Contingency. Another valuable principle is contingency. Pedagogically speaking,
this means that a teacher should give positive reinforcement only when specific objectives or
criteria are met. Greer states:
Good teaching must be contingent in that the appropriate consequences must occur
for the appropriate behavior and in the appropriate context and setting in order to
successfully bring about the learning of skills, knowledge, and affective objectives.120
Poteet claims that the principle of contingency can be learned and implemented quickly.121
A teacher’s praise should have a perceived value, which exists only when teachers make their
positive comments contingent upon good singing behaviors. Additionally, teachers can offer
specific rewards to students contingent upon mastery of specific vocal skills or repertoire.
For example, a teacher might allow a student to be part of a recital only if the student has
developed sufficient skills of appoggio breathing (the teacher should delineate specific
behaviors to measure success or failure of the skill). In order to make something truly
contingent, the teacher absolutely must hold to the bargain. If the student meets the desired
goal, then he must receive the reward, and if he does not, the teacher must have the discipline
to withhold the reward. When students realize that their teacher will be consistent with their
consequences, they will be more motivated to improve.
118
Mikulas, Behavior Modification, 86.
119
Davis and Daly, Girls and Boys Town, 64; Poteet, Behavior Modification; A
Practical Guide, 30.
120
Greer, Design for Music Learning, 3.
121
Poteet, Behavior Modification; A Practical Guide, 44.
53
Satiation. Satiation constitutes the overuse of a specific reinforcer or approval
device.122 When a teacher uses a particular word or phrase to approve a vocal behavior too
frequently, it will tend to lose its power and effectiveness. If a teacher praises a student
constantly with the same words, then the worth of the praise will decrease in value until it
becomes useless as a reinforcer. By being thoughtful about reinforcers, teachers can avoid
satiation and maintain effectiveness.
Size. The principle of size relates to the proportion of the reinforcer compared to the
magnitude of the behavior. “If a reinforcer is too small, the [student’s] motivation will
dwindle. If a reinforcer is too large, the potential for satiation of that reward increases.”123
Teachers should adjust their chosen reinforcers to fit the value of the specific behavior being
addressed. By doing so, the teacher will be more effective at motivating students to improve.
Timing. Timing of reinforcers is extremely important. Research in behavior
modification suggests that the effectiveness of reinforcers is partially determined by the
schedule by which it is delivered.124 If a behavior is reinforced at a regular interval (based on
time or number of occurrences), then it is on a fixed schedule of reinforcement. If the
behavior is reinforced more irregularly, it is on a variable schedule of reinforcement.125
When a new skill has just been learned, teachers may want to follow a continuous schedule of
reinforcement. This means that the teacher reinforces every correct response. To maintain a
previously learned behavior, an intermittent schedule works better. In this schedule, teachers
reinforce only some of the student’s correct behaviors. This means that only some correct
responses are reinforced.126 Behaviors reinforced intermittently tend to continue. In fact,
unwanted behaviors that are reinforced intermittently are often the most difficult to
122
Donald L. MacMillan, Behavior Modification in Education (New York: The
MacMillan Company, 1973): 73-75.
123
Davis and Daly, Girls and Boys Town, 65.
124
Clifford K. Madsen and Charles H. Madsen, Teaching/Discipline: A Positive
Approach for Educational Development (Raleigh, NC: Contemporary Publishing Company
of Raleigh, Inc, 1998), 71-73.
125
Poteet, Behavior Modification; A Practical Guide, 38.
126
Ibid.
54
extinguish.127 The classic example of this is gambling. The individual does not know when
they will win, but the occasional reinforcing win propels many into compulsive behaviors.
Poteet maintains that the schedule of reinforcement is less important than the nature or
quantity of the reinforcer.128 Nonetheless, reinforcement schedules can prove useful in the
voice studio. By using positive reinforcement in its proper time and context, students will be
more motivated in their learning and practicing.
127
Madsen and Madsen, Teaching/Discipline, 74; Poteet, Behavior Modification; A
Practical Guide, 38.
128
Poteet, Behavior Modification; A Practical Guide, 39.
129
Greer, Design for Music Learning, 48.
130
Madsen and Madsen, Teaching/Discipline, 55.
131
Ibid.
55
vowels are formed incorrectly. Maybe the payoff is they think they have great high notes
when their larynx is high. If a teacher can find the specific payoff or reason for the behavior,
and then eliminate that payoff, the negative behavior will disappear. As an example, examine
the student who produces his high notes by elevating the larynx. The fact that he was able to
sing high notes at all has probably been impressive to at least some of his audience. The
occasional compliment from a peer or audience member has served as an intermittent
reinforcer, therefore making the behavior difficult to overcome. When a voice teacher
attempts to help the student stabilize the larynx, that student will most likely lose those high
notes for a time. Unless the teacher can eliminate the old high note payoff effectively, he will
have a hard time getting the singer to commit to the change. So, in a tactful way, the teacher
must get it across to the singer that though he can produce high notes by using the high
larynx, that type of high note is unacceptable in operatic singing. The student should hear
this from multiple sources if possible, explaining that the lack of depth and fullness in the
sound is related to an unstable larynx. This will help the student discriminate between further
compliments from outside sources, and hopefully the payoff will lose its value for the
student. In the case of the high laryngeal position, teachers must never reinforce high-larynx
high notes, even though some of them sound better than others. Eventually the singer will
realize a need for change, and through the teacher’s guidance, he will acquire a desire for
change because the payoff either no longer exists or no longer serves as a payoff. The
process of extinction can be an effective way to decrease unwanted behaviors without being
overly negative or punitive towards the student.
Negative Reinforcement. Another way to decrease less-effective behaviors is
negative reinforcement. This constitutes “those stimuli whose withdrawal reinforces a
behavior.”132 Examples of this include yelling, harassing, intimidating and nagging students.
Unwanted behaviors may decrease in order to avoid the negative reinforcer. Consider
Greer’s thoughts on the subject:
Unfortunately, negative reinforcement is used wittingly and unwittingly in far too
many classrooms and rehearsal halls. Examples include nagging or browbeating
students to perform better....Anytime aversive stimuli are applied to develop, increase,
or maintain behavior, the director is unwittingly attempting to implement negative
132
Poteet, Behavior Modification; A Practical Guide, 32.
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reinforcement....Negative reinforcement is to be avoided especially in music....It is
particularly antithetical to arts education.133
Poteet adds: “In behavior modification the emphasis is upon positive reinforcement. The side
effects of negative reinforcement are such that other less desired behaviors become
apparent.”134 Though negative reinforcement may help eliminate some behaviors, it is not
usually necessary nor is it recommended in the behavioral approach to teaching laryngeal
stability. The effort to make drastic changes in vocal technique is traumatic for singers.
They do not need added negativity from their teacher to make the necessary changes. If
teachers find ways to reinforce good behaviors, and simply remove reinforcers from
unwanted behaviors, they will be more effective.
Punishment/Response Cost. Punishment is not usually recommended in behavior
modification, except when exercised in extreme cases under certain guidelines. It does not
have much use in the voice studio, so it will not receive lengthy elaboration here. Response
cost, however, is a type of punishment that constitutes the removal of a reward, instead of the
addition of something punitive. For example, if a teacher finds a student’s behavior
absolutely unacceptable (such as frequent unpreparedness), then the teacher may resort to
cancelling a lesson, or removing the student from participation in a musical event. Response
cost should be carried out in a matter of fact way (without yelling, cruelty, or causing fear or
withdrawal), and time should be taken to teach the student what the appropriate behavior
should be.135 In appropriate situations, students should be given the opportunity to earn back
the reward that was removed, contingent on improvement or correction of the problem.
Counter-Conditioning. One effective way to decrease behaviors without resorting to
negative reinforcement or punishment is counter-conditioning. MacMillan defines this to
mean “strengthening a more desirable behavior, and in doing so, weakening the undesirable
behavior.”136 In this approach, teachers find a positive behavior that is incompatible with the
negative behavior that needs to be eliminated. By reinforcing the positive behavior, the
133
Greer, Design for Music Learning, 45-46.
134
Poteet, Behavior Modification; A Practical Guide, 33.
135
Greer, Design for Music Learning, 37.
136
MacMillan, Behavior Modification in Education, 72.
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negative one will automatically decrease. For example, if the negative behavior is a rising
larynx, then the teacher could temporarily reinforce a slightly tucked chin. With the chin
tucked, the larynx will not be able to rise much, and therefore that behavior will decrease. (In
this example, teachers should make it clear that tucking in the chin is only to be used
temporarily). The teacher spends time reinforcing the tucked chin instead of correcting the
rising larynx, and therefore accomplishes the goal with a positive approach. Where possible,
counter-conditioning should be used in the behavioral approach to laryngeal stability.
Successive Approximation
In singing there are many vocal skills that singers will not acquire immediately. The
behavioral principle called successive approximation, also known as shaping, provides a way
to help students acquire complex skills by reinforcing approximations of the end result.137
Successive approximation is the process whereby a behavior that is most similar to
the desired behavior is reinforced. Gradually, only those behaviors that are more and
more similar to the desired behavior are reinforced.138
When teaching the low laryngeal position, shaping will be an important tool. Sounds made at
first with a low larynx will be raw, yet by reinforcing those initial successful attempts,
teachers will eventually be able to shape behaviors into the desired results. MacMillan notes:
For educators, the shaping procedure is critical. Too often teachers assume that
reinforcement should be withheld until the goal behavior is achieved, but learning
theory indicates that such a task is less efficient than moving in smaller steps toward
that goal.139
Modeling
Modeling, or demonstrating in the voice studio, can bring about both positive and
negative results, but using modeling effectively can help shorten the shaping procedure.140
The danger with modeling is that students could potentially develop artificial vocal habits
137
Poteet, Behavior Modification; A Practical Guide, 41.
138
Greer, Design for Music Learning, 139.
139
MacMillan, Behavior Modification in Education, 86.
140
Ibid., 89.
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while attempting to sound like a mature teacher. However, successful demonstrations by
teachers and a healthy exposure to live singers and a variety of recordings, can stimulate an
ear for the operatic sound and thereby aid students in their singing process. Most learning
incorporates some degree of modeling. 141 In the process of teaching students to maintain the
low laryngeal position, modeling is very important. Students must become familiar with the
kinds of sounds made with the low laryngeal position. As the student progresses, it will be
helpful if teachers not only model certain sounds for students, but also play recordings of
other singers with similar techniques. In particular, students (especially tenors) should
become familiar with how the voice sounds in the passaggio area with regards to vowel
modification. When students develop an ear for low-larynx singing through modeling, they
will be able to monitor themselves better in their process of acquiring the low laryngeal
position.
Discrimination
The claim “learning involves increasing one’s discriminations,” applies well to vocal
learning.142 Singers need to develop a sense of what types of singing behaviors are positive
and which ones are negative. In addition, they should know the contexts in which certain
behaviors should and should not occur. Behavior methods suggest that teaching students to
discriminate effectively will help them maintain good behaviors while away from the
influence of the teacher. Teachers may listen to recordings with students and discuss good
and bad qualities of sound in order to help the singer develop good discriminations. When
students can discriminate independently between positive and negative singing behaviors in
themselves and others, they will also be more objective in their self-assessment, and they
will be able to distinguish between worthy and unworthy reinforcers.
Generalization
Generalization should be the aim of all behavioral methods. It is described as, “The
process whereby the learner transfers or generalizes a response in conjunction with one
141
Greer, Design for Music Learning, 15.
142
Ibid., 136.
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stimulus to another stimulus.” When a student learns a new vocal skill, and can reproduce it
in various contexts without the teacher, generalization has occurred.
Now that the reader has a general understanding of behavior modification and its
important principles, it is valuable to discuss a format in which behavior techniques apply to
the issue of laryngeal stability.
The first step is to perform a baseline evaluation on the singer’s current behaviors
regarding laryngeal elevation. This could simply consist of the teacher making a videotape of
the voice lesson, and then evaluating and recording the results. In this process the teacher
should identify specific indicators of the rising larynx, and record their number of
occurrences. These indicators will include those discussed in previous chapters, namely
visible rising of the larynx, chin elevation and/or jutting, neck tension, and collapsing
chest/poor posture.
By recording the occurrences of these behaviors, the teacher can measure success and
progress once the process has begun. Instead of measuring all the behaviors of an entire
lesson, teachers may focus on a few minutes during the actual singing of repertoire, which
may reveal more about the singer’s tendencies than vocalises. By making a baseline
evaluation, teachers can discover patterns of behavior which may lead to discoveries of other
important issues and problems.143 The following table is a hypothetical sample evaluation of
a baseline exam:
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TABLE 2
After a thorough baseline evaluation, problem behaviors should become apparent, and
teachers should then make a list of behaviors that need work and prioritize it. When the
teacher knows which specific behaviors contribute to instability of the larynx, they should
select which of those behaviors to target with the student. Instead of choosing negative
behaviors to eliminate, teachers should use counter conditioning by finding alternative
61
positive behaviors which will replace the negative behaviors, thereby eliminating the
problem. It is much more productive to give a student a new behavior to implement than it is
to try to get rid of an old habitual behavior. “As you are attempting to target a behavior,
reconsider the problem and attempt to make the target behavior such that an increase rather
than a decrease of behavior is desired.”144 Targeting alternative positive behaviors will help
the student feel productive and optimistic about their singing, which is particularly important
when dealing with vulnerable and sensitive singers.
Based on the hypothetical table above, the student has an obvious case of laryngeal
elevation as evidenced by a visibly rising larynx, a rising chin, jutting jaw, craned neck, and
chest breathing. Each of those behaviors can be replaced with alternative positive behaviors,
as noted in the following table:
TABLE 3
Ibid., 9.
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Implementation
The first step in implementing the behavioral approach is to introduce the low-larynx
concept to the student. Teachers should explain the pedagogical basis of the low larynx
technique, noting all the virtues of the technique and the disadvantages of the unstable larynx
(as noted in chapter 4). As a result, students should arrive at the realization that no matter
how well they managed with the old technique, the stable larynx will bring a remarkable
improvement.
After selecting new target behaviors, it is time to begin to implement them
behaviorally. The teacher should sit down with the student and explain the findings of the
baseline evaluation and discuss the target behaviors. Teachers should provide rationales for
all new behaviors, so the student understands why the skills are important. Together, student
and teacher set goals for the semester or for the next few months and decide on a timetable
for the implementation of each of the new behaviors. They should also decide on some
rewards for the student upon completion of the set objectives. Goals should be specific,
challenging for the student, and yet reachable. Within a school setting, grades and school
deadlines can serve as rewards and timetables. Outside of the school setting, teachers need to
select rewards and completion dates based on the needs and motivators of the individual
student.
Setting reachable and measurable goals will help students focus on specific tasks in
the practice room, and give them evidence of improvement. Unfortunately, in the author’s
experience, clearly defined goals that can easily be measured are a rarity in the voice studio.
Too often teachers assess overall sound qualities instead of specific behaviors. Targeting
positive behaviors with appropriate goals is an essential part of the behavioral method for
laryngeal stabilization.
Here is an example of a reasonable time line to achieve various goals, including some
possible rewards:
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TABLE 4
GOAL TIMETABLE
Also imperative in the process of stabilizing the larynx is a willingness of the student
to focus on kinesthetic sensations, rather than on the sounds themselves. When students
begin to sing with a low laryngeal position, they will make very different sounds than they
made with an elevated larynx. New sounds may seem harsh, loud, or ugly during this phase.
The new low laryngeal configuration will uproot most of the student’s prior technique and
cause a period of imbalance. Students will experience decreased vocal range, new demands
involving breath management, different registration shifts, and many other issues. This is
64
normal and only temporary during the initial learning period in which the body adjusts to the
new phonatory and structural alignments. Progress will accelerate if students concentrate on
physical sensations instead of listening to themselves with a critical ear. If the singer is able
to focus on the skills (or behaviors) and the physical sensations instead of the sound, the
process will be less painful for him, and the voice that emerges will exceed its old
capabilities in every way.
With behaviors targeted, goals set, and students prepared for the challenges ahead, it
is time to retrain the voice. The process of finding the low laryngeal position should begin by
focusing efforts in the lower middle part of the voice, or the speaking range. Students should
be taught to make primal sounds, and should track the movement of their larynges manually
as described in chapter 4. As the student begins to produce tones with the low laryngeal
position, the teacher should use frequent reinforcing approval. At first, with each new skill,
the approval should come after every appropriate response, and then gradually approval can
taper off into an intermittent schedule for that skill as the student improves. The teacher must
take care to only use approval when a behavior is correct. This will render the teacher’s
approval more valuable, and avoid confusing the student. Behaviors that are approximately
correct may receive reinforcement in conjunction with further instruction or clarification,
utilizing the skill of shaping (see successive approximation). Initially, tones produced with
the low laryngeal position can sound darker than what is ideal. This darkening is normal, due
to the fact that the low laryngeal position creates a longer vocal tract. Teachers should
initially allow the darker sound, until the larynx stabilizes. Once the low laryngeal position
becomes habitual, teachers can correct resonance and placement issues. When the student
reverts to negative behaviors (as they most certainly will in the beginning), the teacher should
take mental note, but avoid using disapproval where possible. Instead, simply request that
the student try again with an added bit of imagery, instruction, or demonstration, and use
approval when the student gets part or all of the behavior right. During each successive
lesson, the teacher may implement the other targeted behaviors, and reinforce them
accordingly.
65
Evaluation
As each goal deadline arrives, the teacher should video tape the lesson and perform an
evaluation of the specific objective. Evaluations should be based on the frequency of
occurrences of the targeted behaviors. If students have achieved their goals, they should
receive the contingent reward. If the student has not achieved some of the goals, set new
goals and adjust the process and deadlines accordingly.
Teachers also can improve their own effectiveness through self-evaluation.
Recording their own behaviors on students’ evaluation tapes will reveal any instances of
approving inappropriate behaviors, missed reinforcement opportunities, and satiation of
approval within their chosen schedule of reinforcement. Where possible, an outside observer
(perhaps another teacher) should do an evaluation, thereby providing reliability to the data.
By evaluating themselves, teachers can measure their actual practices against the principles of
behavior. Evaluation also assists teachers in adjusting their teaching to the needs of the
student.
Summary
66
gap between what they want their singers to do and what is actually done. This process,
when applied to teaching laryngeal stability, equips teachers and singers with powerful tools
that can enable appropriate and difficult changes to take place.
67
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BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH
Tenor Isaac Hurtado grew up in Provo, Utah. After serving a two-year mission for the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, he earned his B.M. in vocal performance from
Brigham Young University, followed by an M.M. in voice performance from the University
of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music. In April 2005, he completed his DM in voice
performance with an emphasis in vocal pedagogy from Florida State University.
Mr. Hurtado has performed with Central City Opera, Opera North, Utah Festival
Opera, Opera Theatre of Lucca, Italy, Cincinnati Opera, and Opera Circle of Cleveland. In
August 2004, he sang the title role in Roméo et Juliette for Festival Opera at Walnut Creek
(CA), where he will return in 2005 in the title role of Bernstein’s Candide. 2005 will also
mark Mr. Hurtado’s debut with New Orleans Opera.
Mr. Hurtado plans to continue performing and teaching privately before pursuing a
professorship. He and his wife Kim are the parents of four (soon to be five) incredible
children.
71