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Voice training resources?

Started by Sophia Gubb, October 01, 2013, 07:34:29 AM

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stacey fisher

where r you from am in UK Scotland and started voice training last year on the NHS  if u r in the UK talk  to your clink and ask them to referral  you   if not look on you tube there some good tips on there for self training
start hrt on july 11/7/2013 been living as fem for 15 months full time and changed name legal a year ago and med recs to fem started spironolactone 7/6/2014 just laying in bed after getting my surgery done on the 11/11/2015 feel so good
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vlmitchell

Quote from: RavenMoon on October 04, 2013, 03:05:25 AM
Ok thanks! Admittedly I haven't played with it much or read any of the documentation.

In the playback screen, you have to zoom in to less than 10 seconds to see any analysis. The blue line is the frequency and the average frequency is located in the right. You're shooting for >180hz. Formants are a trickier thing to explain though.

I posted a sample in the 'not going to wake up and be a girl' thread of my normal speaking voice. I tend to be around 212hz when I check it.
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KabitTarah

Quote from: Isabelle on October 01, 2013, 05:23:42 PM
Voice training is easy, as long as you can allow yourself to be a bit of a dick and talk to yourself and make silly noises :)  there's a thread on this forum for people to upload clips of themselves to get pointers and feedback.

I've just started being OK with talking to myself. I feel much less stupid about it after a while... I just hope it doesn't become a habit in "real" life (outside the car, shower, etc).

I still can't get over the microphone, though... I think I need to turn it on and forget it's there. I did splurge a few weeks ago and got a Blue Snowball... most I've been able to do is some ukulele and singing, though.
~ Tarah ~

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anjaq

Yes that "moving the voicebox up" trick is more of less the goal of many of the fast track tutorials I have seen, back when I needed it the only one I found was Melanie Ann Philipps descriptions. I did that as well and it worked for me rather ok for a while, I still do that, it has become rahter normal for me although I slip sometimes when surprised. I think it is not enough though, at least for me. I still have a low pitch and that gets me in trouble. In the beginning Imanaged to raise pitch a bit and that was good for a while but I guess mostly the pitch but maybe also the voice box thing lead me to get long term trouble with my voice. It was getting rough and eventually I could not keep the pitch. I read in an article by a voice surgeon that almost all of his patients who had been post of 10+ years had some nodules or whatever on their vocal cords that made them sound less than optimal. Can be cured it seems by not raising pitch too much and by some other training.
Another thing that is lacking when using only that trick is obviously to get a proper alternative resonance and loudness/projection. I still have that problem now as I never learned it another way and I was just always the one with the weaker voice. Its not that much of an issue as there are plenty of women who also tend to speak very low volume, so it does not come over as unusual I think, but its better to fix that, I suppose.

Still would like to know how to use the other features in praat except the pitch. I noticed that if I make the same pitched sound with or without chest resonance, I get very different readings in praat. Just adding chest resonance drops the Hz number by like 40 or 60 Hz it seems. The added low frequencies from that resonance are probably entering the calculation. So I am not sure how reliable that pitch detection is...

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