Quote from: KouheiRen on April 06, 2015, 02:11:45 PM
So my question to you all is "How do people react when you're presenting as female and use a male voice?"
Badly
Quote from: KouheiRen on April 06, 2015, 02:11:45 PMI know every where and every class will be different, and I'm okay with anecdotes. And please don't hold back, as I need a good reality check here. Thank so much! (:
I found that voice was the most strongly triggering thing for people. Even more so than appearance or beard shadow. If you had a man's voice then no matter how you looked or dressed or moved, you were a man. You would get "sir"ed every time.
As such I put a lot of work into my female voice and it paid off. I never get "sir" on the phone or in real-life. Thanks to my voice I pass even with small children. It is that strong a trigger.
However, I found that if I used my male voice for just a sentence or two, or for a bit of fun to freak people out, then my female voice was damaged. It took several hours to get back into my female range. In short, the two could not coexist. I know of two people who can mix their voices but I cannot.
Now, after several years, I cannot do a male voice any more. Someone challenged me to do so and I felt that most of the block was mental, in my head rather than a physical issue, but it seems I was wrong. My muscles have got used to their new positions and new ways of working. My chest resonance is dead and I cannot get it back. I probably could with more years of practice but it is not switch-on-off-able. I cannot simply swap between them.
Why can you not learn to sing in a female register? Female teachers can be heard in class and they can even sing.