Page 1 of 1 [ 8 posts ] 

Sarcastic_Name
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 26 Mar 2005
Age: 35
Gender: Male
Posts: 3,593

11 May 2005, 3:59 pm

Before you read this, I suggest you read the other thread I started first.

Anyways, after my mom talked about how weird it was that I wasn't shy onstage, she mentioned that my voice sounded very monotone at parts of the song. We both suspect it could've been that the song is supposed to be sung that way, and that I was just imitating the voice of the guy who sang it. But, I didn't sound monotone to myself. When listening to myelf sing it, I don't hear anything remotely monotone. In choir, no one's ever mentioned my voice being monotone. I fixed that problem last year. Even if it was the song, does anyone else have this problem?


_________________
Hello.


Ghosthunter
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 19 Mar 2005
Gender: Male
Posts: 2,478
Location: Minneapolis, Minnesota

11 May 2005, 8:32 pm

Let's just say this is a stereotype! We are
suppose to be monotonous. I say not since
some of you do DO theatre, and sing.
Thus I don't know what to say.


Sincerely,
Ghosthunter



MrMeaner
Velociraptor
Velociraptor

User avatar

Joined: 7 Feb 2005
Gender: Male
Posts: 413
Location: san antonio, tx

11 May 2005, 9:21 pm

i've been told i have a good singing voice..but i probably couldn't handle hearing myself sing..i can't even stand my own recorded voice on the answering machine..



hadapurpura
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 28 May 2005
Age: 36
Gender: Female
Posts: 674

30 May 2005, 10:04 pm

I'm a soprano singer, and people tell me all the time that that's my thing, but my voice sounds "emotionless". I used to imitate the voice of the person who sings the songs originally, but I've fixed that problem (and I had to, because now I sing songs written by myself), but my voice still sounds emotionless...



Postperson
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 9 Jul 2004
Age: 66
Gender: Female
Posts: 4,023
Location: Uz

31 May 2005, 7:56 pm

I had singing lessons when I was a kid. My speaking voice is flat and emotionless, but my singing voice isn't. I can get overcome by emotion when singing. I'm a mezzo, so it's a 'warmer' tone than soprano, I can understand how it's difficult to convey emotion in the high range and it's certainly not a barrier to success.



vetivert
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 17 Sep 2004
Gender: Female
Posts: 5,768

01 Jun 2005, 1:35 am

apparently, my singing voice is very emotive, or so i'm told. maybe that's because music is very closely linked to emotion with me. i have a double range, so a mezzo soprano going down to about a mezzo baritone (8O) - i have sung the tenor part, when the tenors have been a bit thin on the ground.

i can actually sing the most banal of lyrics with emotion - i suspect it's because the music is FAR more important for me. maybe it's a matter of expression rather than emotion? if i'm really emotional (i.e., on the negative side), i can't sing at all.



duncvis
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 10 Sep 2004
Age: 48
Gender: Male
Posts: 2,642
Location: The valleys of green and grey

01 Jun 2005, 4:32 am

My natural (i.e. unforced) speaking voice is pretty flat, but I can mimic almost anyone, pick up accents by osmosis and had perfect pitch as a kid. As these are conscious uses of the voice I don't think that is what is meant really, just a tendency to mechanical or monotonal speech in normal usage (which apparently I do have, but haven't really noticed myself as I just sound 'normal' to me....) And perhaps emotion or focus may be the reason for this, I don't know. :?

Dunc


_________________
I'm usually smarter than this.

www.last.fm/user/nursethescreams <<my last.fm thingy

FOR THE HORDE!


rumio
Toucan
Toucan

User avatar

Joined: 22 May 2005
Gender: Male
Posts: 257
Location: uk

02 Jun 2005, 9:57 am

interesting one this - I write and sing songs and have recently been recording some: to me my singing voice does sound very monotone and emotionless; nobody else has said that to me but then not many people have heard my stuff yet, singing live is also difficult and I usually have very little sense of the audience, they're just out there somewhere across an unfathomable gulf but then that's pretty much what my experience of other people is anyway, it just gets intensified when I'm performing.

was thinking about Leonard Cohen - deadpan, expressionless voice, reclusive, never married ('too frightened'), introspective...maybe I should 'out' him as an Aspie!