Quote from: Seras on November 11, 2014, 11:25:31 PM
2) Obviously Kate you do not sound female in either of those recordings. Nice luck on the lack of voicebox though wish I was that lucky. I look like I am halfway through swallowing an ostrich egg. Anyway clearly your pitch is not high enough, nor is your resonance and thus your tone of voice sounding correct. For me pitch was easy, the real challenge was resonance. I say "was" tentatively since my voice is still very much a WIP and I have only just got it to a point where I think it sounds acceptable.
Thanks. I "lucked out" I guess although I wish that came with a female voice (and body). I know the voice is definitely nowhere near female but I'm at a starting point now.
Quote1) Get really anxious and embarrassed about practicing, plus, over the fear of trying in case I failed. All i could really do was sing along with stuff in the car when I was driving. Obviously female musicians. So that was pretty much all I did for a few months. I would occasionally try practicing easy phrases or counting in a high pitch. I didn't even know about resonance at this point. This lasted a long time since I was too scared and embarrassed to even practice properly.
This is me although I'm starting to sing more with 80s bands such as REO Speedwagon and Air Supply to start. Then I will move on to female musicians... my music library is full of Whitney Houston and Mariah Carey so you can see my dilemma.

Practicing at work is no-go as I am all over the place and it's pretty much an open environment. At home apart from all the chores there is also my wife who still gets upset when I do girly stuff, so I really don't want to do this in front of her. We also commute together so it's like I'm under constant supervision so I can't practice in the car except for singing. And she's a mess these days emotionally (even more so since I came out) so I don't want to add even more to it.
I figure though that if I'm paying for voice lessons I could be free to practice there and then work up the courage to practice at home. So right now I'm shopping around for a speech therapist.
Quote2) I had to go all femmed up for an appointment at the UK GIC (don't ask) so I was worried and wanted to be able to speak, so I practiced non stop for 4 months. I tried loads of stuff. It was like banging my head against a wall. Nothing worked. I tried candifla, I tried that deepstealth stuff, pretty much if it was on youtube or well known at all I got it checked it out and discarded it.
I tried a bit of deepstealth and it is hard. Tried a bit of CandiFLA, it's hard. But I am trying. There are a few things I notice about my voice. One is that I have vocal fry on the lower end, and at lower volume. The other is that it is nasal. My glasses press my nose so I'm going to probably get rid of them and get contacts or do eye surgery (PRK/Lasik). I have been meaning to do that for a while now anyway. The bigger thing is that I have a gap between my high end and falsetto where absolutely nothing but air comes out. I suppose everyone has this? I dunno. Anyway these things I need to ask about when I see the voice therapist.
Quote5) I practiced on and off very sporadically between then and about a month ago then I started practicing again and it is like I actually made progress without trying. I honestly think it is all about the muscle control, building and development of that. Maybe HRT matters to some degree too, plus I did give up smoking 3 months ago though I never smoked much anyway. Oh and also, if you are having trouble like I did/am, a whole lot of determination.
If I am having normal conversation I can easily do 150-160Hz without even trying. even 170-180 if I raise it a bit. But the time I sit down to read something it drops back... I do some speaking in front of audiences and at church. I have no idea of the pitch but I've been told I sound powerful, so I assume that means low.