Posts Tagged ‘sing backup’
Sing Vocal Harmony, Together As One
Vocal harmony is two or more voices singing at the same time, in harmony with each other. Generally harmonies are built upon the third or fifth of the chord. It is right to say that most bands today strive for at least two and hopefully three harmony parts. To be the best harmony singer you can it is helpful if you learn a little about chord structure. Listen for the other harmonies as you listen to music and you will begin to be able to separate them. Music theory may also be learned by taking a college course if you like.
If you listen to all music with an ear toward harmony you will begin to hear more and more detail. Try to pick out a harmony part and sing along with it as the song plays out. The best situation is to find someone else to practice with. You can switch between who sings melody and who sings harmony so you each get the challenge of finding a good harmony part. In order that both singers are comfortable with their parts, transpose to different keys to accommodate your vocal range.
Look for singing groups or classes in your community. People love to sing and that is what draws people to classes or choirs like these. There are choirs, madrigals and musicals just to name a few. Folk and bluegrass are an excellent choice for learning harmony.
Learn the basics of piano so you can pick out the harmonies visually. Learning piano will be useful to you in every phase of music so spend some time getting to know your way around the piano. If you can play only the melody with one finger, you can find a third or a fifth above or below and start to train your ear. You may even fall in love with the piano along the way.
You will find it much easier to find the right note after you practice these ideas for a while. The main singer is not to be overshadowed, remember that. You must lose your ego and sing beneath the melody to be good at singing back up harmony.
A Backup Singer Is a Star in Their Own Right
To sing backup, you must learn to serve the music, not yourself. The meaning of singing backup is to sing behind someone, not compete with them. If you can control your need to be the center of attention, you can learn backup singing.
This is a difficult skill to learn and is not much understood or appreciated. Backup singing requires a great amount of listening and being very sensitive to the main singer, much as an instrumental accompanist would. You have to begin and end the phrase exactly as the main singer does, you must breathe as they do. As a shadow is always there, so is the effective backup singer.
If you can control your place on the stage, see to it that you can see the singer at all times. If you cannot see the face of the singer your job will be difficult indeed. You must watch the main singer always. If you are watching the singer you can see when they make a mistake or intentionally take another repeat etc. Keep your eyes on the singer. The singer may use a hand gesture to indicate a repeat from the top or even a modulation so be aware.
Learn to blend your phrasing to the will of the singer. If you want to blend in the proper way, start your melody just after the singer starts theirs. Sometimes you are not sure of how loud the singer will be so start quietly and gradually come up to the proper level after the line develops. Another tip is to be easy on the consonants at the start of a melody. If you pronounce a consonant too hard and it is slightly off from the main singers line, it will be very noticeable and disagreeable.
The same technique is to be applied to the ending of all melodies as well. As the singer approaches the end of a melody, gradually decrease your volume so you can avoid the embarrassment of ending after they do. So learn to blend melodies, listen and watch the main singer and you can be a backup singer every band wants to hire.