Building
a Successful Sound
by Brett Manning
Three years ago, I signed a distribution deal with Media Products in Barcelona,
Spain, for the translating and marketing of the Singing Success Program,
thanks to a man named Paul Zamek.
Paul is responsible for the overseas licensing of many major American recording
artists. (His largest client, Kenny Rogers, has sold over 100 million albums
worldwide!) I met Paul on a flight, and he became intrigued with my approach
to teaching the human voice. He wanted to know how I'd advise an amateur singer
looking to become a commercial success.
First, train the voice as you would train your body. Understand that you
have muscles that can be developed in the same way athletes train their muscles.
Singing is fairly easy, with tiny muscles involved in coordinating the voice
and subtle exercises required to develop their coordination. I have taught thousands
of girls to sing as high as Mariah Carey and have safely developed a convincing
commercial sound with even the most rigidly trained classical singers. Just remember
that correct technique is necessary before moving toward a record deal, because
you will need consistency and longevity if you really want to make it.
Second, develop your "style ear" and your vocal coordinations
to sing the rapid licks, trills, and runs consistent with today's pop-singing
styles. You must also develop your unique version of a commercial sound. A straight
purist voice (one dominated by a heady/classical sound) has little chance of
competing with Jewel, Christina, Mariah, or Celine.
Third, do your own thing after you've learned everyone else's tricks.
You have to get as close as possible to your natural talking voice and make your
singing more like speech on pitch. If you change your tone quality so that you
are talking in one voice and singing in another, you've lost the very qualities
that make your voice distinctive. You'll also have a harder time sustaining your
vocal health.
When I first explained this ideology to Paul, he freaked out, then drew a
big smiley face on a yellow legal pad and said, "Your voice is as distinctive
as your face." How many times do you answer the phone and hear, "Hey
girl," and know exactly who it is without hearing another word? We are sometimes
still amazed at this, because most of us don't have voices as recognizable as
Fran Drescher (The Nanny), Arnold Schwarzenegger, Jennifer Tilly, James Earl
Jones, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, or the late sports announcer Howard Cosell.
You don't need a "character" voice like these people to be distinctive;
God already took care of that when he created the equivalent to a thumbprint
in your voice. The U.S. government has spent millions of dollars to develop
technology that can recognize a particular voice. The multiple frequencies
produced by your unique voice are your ticket into the recording industry,
and making the most of them is what I've spent the last 15 years of my life
teaching people to do.
People e-mail me with career questions from all over the world, and many of them
ask the same thing: What do I have to do to get a record deal?
Here's the answer you usually hear: "Headshot, bio, and demo." And
yes, those items certainly have helped many people get started in the recording
industry. Some have even added a video or showcase to the requirement, because
singers also have to be performers. But other than preparing all of these self-promotions
and throwing yourself into the brutally competitive music industry, what else
can you do to increase your likelihood of landing that record deal you've dreamed
about since you were barely old enough to sing "Twinkle, Twinkle, Little
Star?" Here are three other important goals to reach for:
First, increase your vocal range. The greater your range, the more
exciting and confident your singing will be. Find a coach who can teach you
how to mix your chest voice (speaking voice) with your head voice (your softer,
lighter, classical-sounding voice). This "mixed voice" is much thicker than
pure head voice, but has more frequencies than a belted chest voice (which is
also the leading cause of vocal nodules). The "mixed voice" has the
best of both worlds, which is why so many top Grammy winners sing in this vocal
register. You must learn the "mix" if you want a commercial sound,
effortless vocalizing, and a healthy voice. (The Singing Success Program
can help you with this.)
Second, find as many influences as possible. Influences are inescapable.
The real question is, do you have enough of them to keep you from sounding
exactly like your favorite artist? We don't need another Celine Dion. I have
coached dozens of young women who can now sing almost exactly like Celine; but
who wants a counterfeit when the real thing is already available? If
you have enough diverse vocal influences, you will find a little piece of
yourself in each one of them.
Third, make a decision to find your unique voice and spend the rest
of your life devoted to developing it. Don't quit your day job until your
career takes off, and your office gig can be replaced with a Broadway contract
or record deal. But give every extra buck, hour, and emotion to this endeavor.
You don't want to look back and say, "If only." You are unique
and you have dreams. Dreams are visions wearing work clothes. The world advances,
not through those who give up on their visions, but through those who stand
until their labor and talent takes form.
So how about you?...
Check out Brett Manning's Singing
Success Course for At-Home Study