IF YOU DON’T DO THE BELLY TUCK…YOU’RE FU*KED!!! 🎶

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  • čas přidán 1. 07. 2024
  • IF YOU DON’T DO THE BELLY TUCK…YOU’RE FU*KED!!!….Hello ladies & gents! I am back with another daily tip, this time for the more seasoned singers and for more verismo repertoire!…Learn how to activate the hypogastric region to engage the epigastric region of the abdominal wall, elevating your vocal performance to new heights, and engaging in a much deeper sense of breath support!…and discover why if you don't do the belly tuck, you're... well, you know! 🎶
    #singingvideos #singing #opera #operalife #singinglessons #singingtips #operalife #vocal #vocalist #vocalcoaching #voice #vocaltips #vocalcoach #music #tenor #shingle #belly #tummytuck #fucked #highnotes #breath #breathsupport #support #appoggio #italian #italy #operasingerlife #operasingersofinstagram #piano #composing #voicelessons

Komentáře • 50

  • @magictenor
    @magictenor Před 5 dny

    Muchas gracias por compartir!!!

  • @angalmeida29
    @angalmeida29 Před dnem +1

    Totally agree

  • @DallasChamberChoir
    @DallasChamberChoir Před 7 dny +1

    Absolutely brilliant - when you’ve got it, you’ve got it - you have a gift of explaining complex concepts that engages an anatomical & practical understanding of one’s instrument (the body) in demonstrative and relatable terms. Decades of singing, performing, and countless masterclasses pale in comparison to what you have accomplished in less time than a typical voice lesson - every vocal student ESPECIALLY every TENOR would do extremely well to watch your videos. Bravo. 👏 ❤

  • @marceloyamamoto7178
    @marceloyamamoto7178 Před 3 dny

    Now that's new to me: online classes from a singing teacher who can actually sing (and teach how to). Thank you so much!

  • @c.m.b.wagnerbariton9232
    @c.m.b.wagnerbariton9232 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Classical breathing technique explained in detail but simple enough. Also hinting at possible caveats. Wonderfully done and superbly demonstrated by a young opera professional. This is rare. Thank you!

  • @Sylviatough
    @Sylviatough Před 2 měsíci +4

    Been singing for 20+ years and always engaged my stomach muscles in and up not down and out but I've never engaged the muscles below my belly button/pubic area. Just done it while doing my scales and I was able to sustain the note longer and with far less tension and it felt like i was using less breath.....brilliant....thanks for this tip

  • @elan191173
    @elan191173 Před 2 měsíci +5

    OMG that final "You're fuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuu - ckkkk - ttttt" had me rolling!

  • @paulsevenitz616
    @paulsevenitz616 Před 5 dny

    I notice as a voice student I am always fokussing much on the deep support..however not the onsets.. I believed I can repair and regulate my voice quality through support..but it seems the onsets and simply sy sul fiatto and in good yawning but queeky position is key..and training it in higher ranges too..I always thought high register from supporting deep

  • @nikipopov97
    @nikipopov97 Před 2 měsíci +1

    You are super talented! Thank you for sharing your personal experience and thoughts!

  • @AlejandroCaslo
    @AlejandroCaslo Před 2 měsíci +2

    Really fun tip and it works! Keep them coming!

  • @SardorIminov-uc9ws
    @SardorIminov-uc9ws Před 2 měsíci +1

    thank you so much for such a tip! Can you please make a video like warming up or even better voice workout (high notes), so we can make it our own daily workout, thanks!

  • @Vamosacontarmentiras-zz4qu
    @Vamosacontarmentiras-zz4qu Před 2 měsíci +1

    well, that was fu*cking brilliant!

  • @michaelbennati5793
    @michaelbennati5793 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Thank you so much. Very helpful tips!

  • @kevinm6790
    @kevinm6790 Před 2 měsíci

    Brilliant! Thank you!

  • @arthurcornelio
    @arthurcornelio Před 2 měsíci

    Great ! Support / appoggio ;)

  • @TonyPartington
    @TonyPartington Před 2 měsíci

    Wonderful video Jose. Terrific tip!

  • @MisterOpera
    @MisterOpera Před 2 měsíci +2

    I wish you'd mention this is only true when the pelvis is open in the front at the end of the inhale. If you're starting out with more spinal flexion you'll be doing the opposite. I would say this demo shows a rather high diaphragm, not a low one, and with the pelvic floor not stretched. It's not wrong, but neither is tucking the sacrum, and neither is avoiding rib flare like you have here. There's lots of recipes for different sounds 😊

  • @qwarlock4126
    @qwarlock4126 Před 2 měsíci

    Great videos. I love hearing you just riffing on the life is a singer. Just found your channel and having a great time with it.

  • @caninbar
    @caninbar Před 2 měsíci

    YOU'RE WONDERFUL!!!

  • @PapagenoHannover
    @PapagenoHannover Před 2 měsíci +1

    What a beautiful man!

    • @PapagenoHannover
      @PapagenoHannover Před 2 měsíci

      This smiling in 0:14 is like a sunshine. One can understand Liú´s statement: "Ei perderá suo figlio...io l´ombra d´un sorriso."

  • @ciociosan
    @ciociosan Před 2 měsíci

    “Very deep and inspirational.” 😂

  • @c.m.b.wagnerbariton9232
    @c.m.b.wagnerbariton9232 Před 2 měsíci

    Would love to hear about ‘compression’ in case you use that term. (Meaning: higher/highest tenor range and/or effects like singing ‘dolce’, expanding the voice for more dramatic rep…
    And … wonderful messa di voce at the end! All thanks to … the belly tuck! 😂❤️

  • @majkkruszon6780
    @majkkruszon6780 Před 2 měsíci

    Thanks, i feel maybe the same but jus witch the intercostal.

  • @Delectatio
    @Delectatio Před 2 měsíci +2

    Oh no, I don't wanna be fu*ked😱! I will always do the belly tuck, I promise!😃
    BTW, some teachers say it's obligatory for singers to train their breathing muscles and via playing brass instruments, inflating balloons etc. - they say only this way you can achieve stamina and get your body used for tension needed for singing, especially for high notes. What do you think of this, Jose🤔?

    • @Tenor_Simerilla
      @Tenor_Simerilla  Před 2 měsíci +4

      Sure, however for me it’s not so much training the musculature (which I am sure helps) as it is training the coordination of all these concepts through repetition. And being able to automatically make all these movements simultaneously like a well oiled machine. It just takes time because there are alot of concepts and layers to singing with the body and we often learn one concept at a time and then we have to integrate that concept to our technique and rinse and repeat with a new concept. Very much like an athlete practicing one specific skill set repeatedly to build the coordination. Which repetition by the way…strengthens musculature as well. 👍

    • @Delectatio
      @Delectatio Před 2 měsíci

      @@Tenor_Simerilla Got it, bro!🙂🤝

  • @EandVEntertainment
    @EandVEntertainment Před 2 měsíci

    This is how I was taught to breath, with maybe a slightly different focus or perspective. This is how you sing the long phrases.

  • @chrismoukengue424
    @chrismoukengue424 Před měsícem

    does it work for other music genre like pop, rock,rnb...? thanks

  • @atanasnikolov3373
    @atanasnikolov3373 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Hallo! Can you make a video showing us how to train our passage with some good exercises? Which you did when you were starting to build yourself up as a tenor. I believe that they will be useful not only to me, but also to a large part of the community.

  • @KaineHayward
    @KaineHayward Před 2 měsíci +2

    I'm not a physical specialist, but I'm fairly certain the reason this works is that one is using the lower abdominals to activate the transverse abdominis (core) more, which the brings about a slightly higher level of overall compression in the torso, as long as the singer is trained already in a sense of expansive suspension in the intercostals (to resist the contraction of the diaphragm). It would be more the classic Caruso approach to tuck it already on the breath in, but I think what you are showing practically amounts to something very similar.
    The transverse abdominis is the most important muscle for support that no one talks about. It's also the reason why we often feel a strong sense of support/stability in the lower back with good singing, as it wraps all the way around the lower torso.

  • @blazindav
    @blazindav Před 2 měsíci

    When you are singing, do you feel like you're "pushing" the upper portion out, or are you "pulling" the bottom portion in, or doing both at the same time?

    • @Tenor_Simerilla
      @Tenor_Simerilla  Před 2 měsíci +4

      By now it’s one fluid simultaneous movement so I would it’s both at the same time. But I started out first feeling the pull or tuck. But it’s not sucking in your belly I want to clarify that. It’s more of a “tightening” of the hypogastric area. Like a contraction. 👍

    • @HoltonJohnson
      @HoltonJohnson Před 2 měsíci

      @@Tenor_Simerilla I think that's a super important distinction. I notice if I suck in my hypo-gastric region, it causes the epiglottis to pooch out hard, which I'm sure is not what you want. If you tighten the lower area, you get a firmness in the epi region which seems much more appropriate. Great videos! Keep 'em coming!

    • @HoltonJohnson
      @HoltonJohnson Před 2 měsíci +1

      I would like to add an interesting story though. When I was but I wee lad, my first voice teacher was short and stocky, looked a lot like Gigli and I swear sounded a lot like him as well. When he inhaled and sang, his whole epi-gastric region , all the way around his upper belly would push out. that's how he would fill up his lungs, by filling that area. He could fill the left epi-gastric region, then the right, etc. He had complete control over that area. It was rather remarkable. He also did the pushing the piano trick. Now that's probably too much pressure there, but it worked for him.

    • @Tenor_Simerilla
      @Tenor_Simerilla  Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@HoltonJohnson yes that’s very close to what I feel in This movement. It’s not perhaps as much as you may be describing but there is also very much a lateral support as well. Especial with the intercostal well expanded. Always staying pliable, so you can lean into it when you want more and out of it when you need less. 👍

  • @dmitryno4819
    @dmitryno4819 Před 2 měsíci

    Can you sing with distortion? I mean rock vocal. Btw great videos, thanks.

    • @Tenor_Simerilla
      @Tenor_Simerilla  Před 2 měsíci +1

      If you’re asking me personally. No I don’t sing with distortion or rasp. It’s not in the style of my specific musical genre. I know for rock it is more used and I know there is a “safe” way of doing it that doesn’t actually require singing with a “rasp” in the voice as that is incredibly unhealthy and damaging. But its not my expertise, so I don’t teach it in what I do. :) 👍

  • @ARTEMIYNIK
    @ARTEMIYNIK Před 25 dny

    You talked about Caruso breathing technique I think

    • @ARTEMIYNIK
      @ARTEMIYNIK Před 24 dny

      Do you have vocal lessons online?

  • @FCOLAXCDG
    @FCOLAXCDG Před 2 měsíci

    ❤️🇱🇨!!!

  • @errol-ih4jy
    @errol-ih4jy Před 2 měsíci +1

    no thats great, i like everything you said, is the tilted larynx included in this pattern of disciplines, thanks let me know.

  • @KingTimothyDanielLeyba777
    @KingTimothyDanielLeyba777 Před 2 měsíci +2

    I don't like the cussing but your voice is beautiful Mr. Jose! ❤ 😊 🎉

  • @user-xu1jt3st7c
    @user-xu1jt3st7c Před 14 dny

    How strangely this knowledgeable guy pronounces "position"!

  • @william91786
    @william91786 Před měsícem

    What the f##k is vibrato?

  • @dasarkas
    @dasarkas Před 16 dny

    You’re engaging the transverse abdominis, correct?