How To Sing Better: This article will focus on in-depth singing tips which will show you how to become a better singer, how to sing in tune and how to improve your on stage persona and confidence so you both sing better on stage and engage the audience more.

Are you wondering how to know if you sing good? Or if your vocals just aren’t good enough to make it?

Do you want a better voice? Are you concerned you don’t know how to sing in tune all the time and it might be stopping you being a successful singer?

Did you have negative reactions to your singing? Fail auditions? Or just aren’t sure how to sing good enough to be a professional singer, rather than just singing for fun? 

All of these problems can be solved by learning how to sing well and learning more about creating a unique singing style. Even if you’ve already started learning how to sing, and having singing lessons. If you want to learn how to get a better singing voice, so you can be good enough to make it in the music business, or just impress your friends, you are in the right place!

Do you even really need to learn how to sing better to be successful?

Before I share the best strategies on how to get better at singing, I wanted to address something I’ve seen in a few other articles on the topic. I’ve seen it mentioned that you don’t really need to be a great singer to be successful. I admit this opinion has some truth in it. There are plenty of successful artists who have to use autotune fixes to their singing, can’t sing high notes live, or just made it famous because they have a unique sound, or a good songwriters, rather than being truly expert singers in any technical sense.

But, that said, if you learn how to be a good singer, truly excellent at singing, you’ll have a significant advantage.

If you learn how to sing better it will give you confidence. It will make you happier – because you’ll enjoy singing more and never lose your voice from bad technique. It will work as a foundation for eventually creating a singing career.

I’ll talk about the importance of style and personality later in the article, as it is still essential to singing success. But as a starting point, working to be more talented is a good strategy. Even though not every successful singer is a perfect singer, most are at least really good. Very few made it off being mediocre. So why take the risk, when in the space of a few months most people can quickly learn how to get a better singing voice.

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How To Sing Better: The Basics

If you have zero experience singing and are looking for a guide to start from the very beginning, you might want to also check out my Learn How To Sing For Beginners Guide.

How To Sing Better: The Basics

How To Sing Better: The Basics

This first set of Singing Tips for how to sing well are focused on the fundamental basics of singing.  These are the first things you’d learn if you take proper singing lessons online or with a tutor.

Fundamentals are probably the least exciting part of learning to sing. However, they are essential. If you are asking “How can I sing better?” Then mastering fundamentals is normally the simplest way to learn how to sing better fast. Once you learn the fundamentals to the point where they become second nature, you’ll then be able to focus on the more advanced techniques that will make you a true professional singer.

Support & Control Your Breathing

Singing is breathing. Vocal sound is created by air moving through the vocal cords. By gaining full control of your breathing, you will get much greater control of your singing.

The diaphragm is the key muscle that helps you control the speed and quantity of breath going in and out at any moment. To have perfect breath control, you need to breathe from the diaphragm, not the chest, and you need to strengthen the diaphragm through breathing exercises. Consistent breath will make for a clearer vocal tone, more volume, less vibrato, better pitching (Yes, breathing is a big part of how to sing in tune) and the ability to hold notes longer.

Here is one simple breathing exercise you can do everyday.

Reduce Muscle Tension – Sing At The Mirror

If veins are popping out of your neck when you try to sing high notes, you are singing with poor technique.

Watch yourself singing in front of a mirror and pay close attention to physical changes in your neck and face. The more advanced tips to sing better high notes below will help you eventually eliminate most muscle tension. But, at the basic level, your first job is to just be aware of where tension is happening, and then trying to sing in front of the mirror without that tension appearing.

Experiment. See how it feels to sing in certain ways, then try to sing while relaxing more. Over time, as you work on professional technique, you’ll start to discover all your bad habits and stop doing them.

Warm Up

It’s not glamorous, but a proper warm up routine will not only protect you from damaging your voice but it also opens up your tone and range. Anyone who tells you warm ups are not essential probably never sang Journey & Bon Jovi, 3 hours a night, 7 nights a week.

The simplest warm ups are just running scales up and down your full range. This has the side benefit of constantly working your pitching skills too. At an absolute minimum, singing a comfortable song that doesn’t push your voice can help you ease into singing, but it will never substitute for having worked every note in your range before having to sing those notes in songs at a live show or for recording.

It’s not just about vocal warm ups either, a little bit physical exercise to get you breathing more can also help.

Sing with a wide mouth

This is one of the quickest things to help you sing better – and make your vocal tone clearer and louder.

I mentioned that singing is breathing. As well as the breath itself, and the vocal cords it moves through to make sound, the final part of the trinity is resonance. This is created by all the open spaces in your respiratory system which help the vocal sound echo and grow into a dynamic voice tone. If your mouth is closed, relatively little sound will come out! If partially open, more will come. If you sing wide then you can increase your vocal volume while also making your vocal tone more open too.

Practice singing at a mirror and observing how your tone and volume can change depending on how much you open your mouth.

How To Sing Good & High! Hit The High Notes.

How To Sing Good & High!

How To Sing Good & High!

How to sing high notes cleanly and powerfully has to be the number one question almost all singing students seem to be fascinated with. Let’s face it, when top artists hit those high, power notes, it gives you goosebumps! Every singer wants to be able to sing like that.

It’s important to already be working on the fundamentals, as described above, otherwise all the below secrets to singing higher will not work effectively. Below, my top singing tips for increasing vocal range and strength.

Don’t stretch for high notes, lower your larynx and sing better instantly

It’s counter-intuitive but it is one the best vocal hacks that will instantly make it easier to sing higher without straining. Most singers stretch their larynx upwards to reach high notes, actually, that makes it much harder to hit high notes. Instead, as you sing up, you need to move your larynx down. Of all the tips on here, this is the only one that can genuinely help you sing better instantly. If you can keep that larynx down as you sing higher, you’ll hit your high notes without the same strain you had before.

Learn how to sing better: Put your finger on your throat where your larynx is. Swallow. Feel the movement of the larynx go up and then down each time you swallow. Now yawn, feel the larynx go down, then back up as you stop yawning. Now, practice moving the larynx up and down as you please – using the same movement as swallowing and yawning, but without actually swallowing and yawning. You have independent control of the larynx if you want it. Now, practice trying to sing a high note while purposefully making your body push the larynx down.

This is not an easy skill to master straight away, keep at it and you will be able to hit higher notes, cleanly, without cracking. After a lot of practice, you no longer need to think about larynx movement, it will be trained to automatically move down when you sing high.

Head voice can sound like your chest voice – Sing higher notes effortlessly

Most natural singers are singing in chest voice. This is the same register of vocal sounds that humans use for speech, so it’s the easiest way to sing without any formal singing training. However, even people with the most amazing vocal range in chest voice can only push that register to a certain pitch. At which point the sound starts to crack. Essentially, you can train to move your chest voice up a few notes, but if you want to increase your range by octaves, learn how to sing well and how to sing in tune at much higher pitches, you need head voice.

The secret to singing crazy high, is not forcing your chest voice to do something unnatural, it is instead training your head voice to have the volume, power and tone that makes it sound similar to chest voice. Plus, being able to seamlessly transition back and forth between head voice and chest voice as needed.

If that sounds complicated, it is. Which is why, even many top artists still struggle with it. But, if you want an amazing vocal range like Bruno Mars, Mariah Carey or Jessie J, so you can really stand out as a unique and incredible talent, mastering head voice is essential.

If you join my email newsletter I’ll share some more practical & in depth explanation of how to achieve this.

Yours Free: How to Dramatically Increase Your Vocal Range.
Learn the secret tactics used by the world's greatest singers to increase their range rapidly.
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Check out my article on the difference between chest & head voice For some video examples of how famous singers seamlessly switch between chest and head voice.

How Can I Sing Better? Sing More / Practice More

“Can you get better at singing by just singing?” – Yes, so long as you are working at improving technique at the same time.

This might seem obvious, but believe me, if you set a singing student exercises to do, when they come back for their next lesson, they haven’t put in as many hours as they should. Some don’t even practice at all and consider their weekly lesson as their time to both learn and practice.

Your voice is a muscle. It gets stronger by regular use. You should sing for at least 1 hour every day to increase vocal stamina. This regular use will not only make your voice last longer when you perform (ie. be able to sing for a few hours at a time without losing your voice) but also make it more resilient when trying to belt higher notes.

IMPORTANT: If you sing a lot and notice your voice becoming husky or sore, STOP! Normally this is a sign of poor vocal technique, or not warming up properly before singing. Never continue to push your voice once it becomes clearly sore, as this can lead to long term damage. If you are losing your voice after 1 hour of singing, you need to seriously work on correct vocal technique:

Hone Your Vocal Technique

Above I’ve talked about plenty of essential singing tips and methods on how to sing better. The hard part is that you need to do all of this, and more, all at once, in order to sing like a true pro. That may sound a little daunting but actually most of it becomes second nature after you’ve practiced for many months.

I’ve found that for vocal students trying to learn how to get a better singing voice, simply knowing all the above is not what really makes the difference in their vocal progress.

The real difference is made by having a specific program to follow that helps them apply all of the above information (and more!) in a structured way, and on a regular basis. This helps with motivation. It also helps with learning the right things in the right order and how to combine them.

Learning the right technique + Staying Motivated + Regular Practice + Time = Singing Better

But a lot of singers struggle with keeping on top of all these things. Simply knowing what you should do, doesn’t mean you’ll do it consistently, regularly and correctly. Also, if you jump around from free video to free video on YouTube, you end up collecting a lot of random lessons but will struggle to put them all in the right order. Even worse, the free videos sometimes leave out important steps as they don’t want to give away all the secrets for free.

Piecing together a complete vocal learning strategy, that will keep you on track and in the right direction, every day, using random free videos on YouTube, is not easy and is unlikely to get you success as quickly as having a structured, professional online course.

If you want to learn how to get a better singing voice fast… If you want to sing at a professional level within months, rather than years, then consider getting an affordable online singing course:

See My List Of The Best Online Singing Courses

How To Sing In Tune (ie. How To Sing On Key)

How To Sing In Tune

How To Sing In Tune / Learn To Sing In Tune (ie. How To Sing On Key)

There are many ways to become a better singer. But for me, learning how to sing on key, consistently, is a skill that will really make you stand out. Performing flawless runs all over your range, or hitting a pure power note without wobbling at all, will make you sound like a pro and grab the attention of any audience – and especially agents and managers who can help you succeed.

The pitch you produce when singing is controlled by how open or closed your vocal chords are. When you release air from your lungs, it passes through your vocal cords. The smaller the space the air passes through, the higher the pitch produced. If you want to know how to sing in tune it comes down to both feeling the changes in your vocal cords, and listening to yourself and how close you are to the pitch.

Once you can perfectly connect the physical movement of your vocal cords with the sound you can hear, you will be able to sing perfectly in tune. At the next level, you might join singers like me who can sing in tune even when we can’t clearly here our own voice through the PA system / monitors, simply because you get used to the physical sensation and can hear/feel the pitch inside your body and head.

So, how do you learn to control your vocal cords and sing in tune well?

Experiment With Pitching To An App or Tuner

To build muscle memory, rather than singing along to your favourite songs, sing to a pitching app, tuner or pitching software*. With this, you will initially be singing just one pure note at a time, rather than a melody. In this way, you can train yourself to feel every note. By feeling the notes in your throat, rather than simply singing to them, you will start to build muscle memory.

You will also hear when you waiver away from the note – unlike when singing to a melody where you may mistake singing out of tune to simply be passing to the next note.

Practice as often as needed to hold a single pure note intune, for at least 10 seconds at a time, without vibrato or wavering pitch. If you can’t hold a single note continuously for 10 seconds without running out of breath, you need to work on your fundamentals of breathing first, then come back to learning how to sing in tune.

Record Yourself Singing To Backing Tracks

Once you are feeling confident that you can hold any note in your range for 10 seconds, it’s time to record yourself to a backing track. Don’t record yourself to a track that already has lead vocals on it as these may mask your true performance. You can record with your phone, or onto a computer, just using the built in microphone. Or you can try recording properly at home with a good microphone, then you can eventually record a proper demo too.

Listen back to the track and note points where you are singing out of tune. Practice those parts again to determine if you always sing the same bits out of tune, or if it was a one off mistake.

Once you identify repeated mistakes, work at those parts to find the right pitch for the melody you are singing poorly. You can try slowing down the original track (but maintaining the original pitch) with an audio player on your computer if it helps you listen to the original singer and identify the pitch changes during a melody. Then record to the backing track again and again until you can sing every note on key.

However, you may not get every note on key right away, because:

  • Poor breath control / Vocal cord control. Singers often go out of tune right at the end or beginning of a phrase because they “dropout” their breath, or relax/tighten their vocal cords before they finish the note, or after they start the note. Control should start before the note and end after the note – not during the note. The control is the foundation the note lives within.  If you want to become a better singer, pay close attention to when you control your breath and vocal cords.
  • You can’t sing every note. Are you trying to sing like Christina Aguilera*? – who can do very fast and complicated runs up, down and all around the scale she is in. To sing that many notes, that fast, cleanly, involves already being able to sing simpler melodies perfectly. If you are skipping learning to sing pure notes for 10 seconds perfectly, then you are likely using quick changes between notes as a way to hide from singing cleanly. Instead, simplify the melody, get that perfect first, then work on faster melodies and vocal athletics once you are already nailing the simple stuff.
  • Visualize / hear every note. Similar to the above problem. A lot of singers struggle with transition/passing notes. These are the notes that happen quickly to move between longer held notes in a melody. Some singers simply don’t listen to what those notes actually are, and so stumble their way messily between main notes. Or, they don’t practice the scale for the song, so they end up singing clashing notes that don’t fit in the song at all. There are many reasons singers are sloppy on passing notes and runs. One way to learn how to sing in tune in this situation is to really listen to every note of the melody. Then sing them all, very slowly, unaccompanied. Feel each individual note, pull them out of the melody. You are deconstructing the melody to hear every component note. Once you can sound them all, cleanly, start to speed up the melody and connect every note until you can sing it like the original.

You can see that learning how to sing on key can take trial and error in order to perfect. It’s ok to make mistakes but it’s important to accept and recognize those mistakes so you can try again and eventually learn how to sing in tune every time!

Better Technique Automatically Leads To Better Singing in Tune

Although you must follow all the above advice on how to sing in tune as well, it may come as a surprise that working on things like breathing and muscle control will help you with singing in tune just by itself. A lot of weak pitching comes because of poor breath control and poor diaphragm strength, as well as weak vocal chords.

Pitch is all down to vocal cord opening and closing, and the air that you allow through them. You simply can’t hold a clean, in tune, sustained note for long (or at all) if you don’t have the breath and muscle strength to consistently release air from your lungs and hold your vocal chords without wavering. If you have wobbly pitch, or your pitch drops out of tune at the end of a phrase, this is almost always due to inconsistent breath release and/or weak vocal cords.

These fundamentals are covered in depth, with easy to follow exercises in almost any complete vocal training course.

How To Become A Better Singer: Get Feedback

We’ve all seen TV singing shows where someone comes in and sings really bad, gets ripped to shreds by the judges and then is either in complete denial that they are terrible, or completely destroyed by learning this. The saddest part is, most of those shocking singers were likely surrounded by people back home who knew they were bad, but didn’t want to hurt their feelings.

The second scenario is the person who was too shy to go out and sing, only sung by themselves, finally got up the courage to sing in public, and everyone hated their singing. This will likely destroy confidence as well as scarring them for life.

The Solution? Get honest feedback. Don’t wait until you’ve really put yourself out there to find out you are not a good singer, and be devastated by the news. Instead, do the following.

  • Find someone who will give you honest feedback. This is definitely not your parents and probably not your best friend. Perhaps a brother or sister, or a friend who you know will be brutally honest with you. Preferable someone who can actually sing themselves, non-singers may not be good judges. Ask more than one person to get many opinions.
  • Be open & appreciate negative feedback. If you ask for feedback in a way that makes it seem you are just fishing for compliments, people will probably lie to you. If you are a popular person socially, friends may lie to you because they don’t want to get on the bad side of you and have you bad mouth them. Asking a stranger who doesn’t care about what you think of them is sometimes the only way to get real feedback. Going to a vocal coach is one way to do this too as they’ll be able to give you some very detailed feedback on what you are doing wrong.
  • Be honest with yourself. If you never had any vocal training at all it is almost impossible that you have reached your vocal potential. Even top artists continue to work with vocal coaches years after they have become successful. You may be good, but chances are you are not amazing, yet. Industry secret: a lot of the competitors who make it past the auditions on singing shows were already groomed by a manager and singing teacher before they auditioned. They don’t talk about that on the show though. If you want a competitive advantage, put in the time in advance.

But remember, whether you are a good singer or not today, that doesn’t mean you can’t learn how to be a good singer. Almost everyone can. The first step is admitting that you have room to improve, and accepting you should get the best vocal training so you can become the singer you always wanted to be.

By getting insight on what you are doing wrong, you’ll be able to work on it. By being willing to accept you are not perfect (because no one is) you’ll be more motivated to work on improvement, and hence become a better singer.

 

How To Sing Better: Style & Stage Presence

How To Sing Better: Style & Stage Presence

How To Sing Better: Style & Stage Presence

Technical singing ability is only part of learning how to sing better. If you want to engage people on stage you also need to have a style, transmit emotions and ooze stage presence. In this section on how to sing well, the elements that make a good singer into a star.

How To Sing Well: Emotional Connectivity To The Song

So you can sing every note perfectly. But do you make the audience really feel something? Do you convey the emotion of the song? When you hit the most powerful notest, do you give people goosebumps? Or are they losing interest in your performance?

Learning to convey emotions with your singing can be the hardest thing for singers to learn as it comes from you, from your soul, not from a craft you can just learn. Though you can improve over time once you understand how it works.

It’s probably the most important thing on this whole list. Many a bad singer has got popular through raw passion and emotion alone. If you can make the audience feel something, really feel it, then you will own that audience.

Some of the best ways to start conveying emotion in your singing:

  • Understand the lyrics. Don’t just sing the words, really study them in advance. Understand the meaning they are supposed to convey. Where are the most powerful lyrics in the song? Really feel the emotion that those lyrics represent and let it show in your voice and actions when you sing.
  • Emotions are waves, not a tsunami. Very few songs are all-in-intensity 100% of the way through. Emotions in songs typically rise and fall. So DON’T just choose one emotion that the song is about and sing with that full on from start to finish. Instead, raise and lower the intensity of the emotion depending on each lyric and each chord in the song.
  • Sing with your whole body, not just your voice. Body language and facial expressions add to the emotion of the voice. A powerful, uplifting vocal can be accompanied by wide leg stance, an open chest etc. A sad vocal may work well with shrinking your body back into a more defensive position.
  • Control Dynamics. Emotion can be expressed through vocal dynamics. Softer singing to express sadness or loss. More volume to emphasize a powerful point in the song. etc.

Stage Presence & Confidence

Stage presence and confidence are a double whammy. Not only do they engage a crowd, they also make you sing better.

It’s a physiological fact, if you feel confident and you win the crowd over, the elation of that feeling and the adrenaline associated with it, will give your singing a boost. I hit notes in chest voice live on stage that I struggle with in the studio.

Once again, even average singers can get one hell of a response just from being immensely confident. The audience forgives them for bad singing just because they have so much engaging passion.

Confidence is not something everyone has from day one. It’s something you will build over time. Some important steps to think about:

  • Be a great singer. As I said right at the start, being the best technical singer is not the only factor in success. But, if you have amazing vocals as a foundation, you can at least feel confident that people will like your voice, even if your performance may still need work. The confidence that you know you can sing is a great start for building stage confidence. So, train your voice properly.
  • Fake it till you make it. Just act confident. Easier said than done, but if you’ve followed the other steps on here and have the knowledge that you really can sing, then stage confidence is the next step. It will grow the more you perform, but to start with, just force yourself to act confident. One of the best ways to increase stage confidence is to decrease stage fright – as people can tell when you are nervous. Being at least comfortable, rather than a bag of nerves, is a stepping stone to confidence.
  • Start small/easy and build up. Start by performing to audiences that will be supportive no matter what. For family and friends, or at karaoke where everyone gets applause even when they are not great. Your worst choice for early live performances is to jump into a highly competitive open mic or TV talent show in front of a room of strangers or perform at your school or college (unless you are like the most popular kid in school, at which point you probably don’t need confidence tips). But remember, as I mentioned earlier in the get feedback section, having a positive performance experience is important, but you need to balance that with understanding what you still need to improve upon.

Create A Unique Singing Style

The public doesn’t just buy into great singing and performance, the magic really happens when you move on just one step further and create something truly unique. Although you can make a great living off just being an excellent singer and performer (there are a lot of careers available), the biggest dream for most singers is to take it to the next level and become a singing star.

To achieve that you need something more than talent. You need unique talent. Think about artists like Mariah Carey, Christina Aguilera, Bruno Mars, Beyonce, Freddie Mercury. They had a personality, a style. Both how they look, how they sing, what they do on stage. They are the full package, whilst each being entirely unique from each other.

In marketing (and the music industry is all about marketing AND music), it’s called a USP – Unique selling point. There are already millions of great singers in the world, so why you? Why should you be the next big success? Singing better is not just about technique, it’s also about better personality and vocal style.

If you don’t already have ideas about what you do that makes you stand out, firstly try and come up with some ideas. But it could be time to look for a manager to help expose your unique potential. But, be aware that managers won’t take you on unless they see raw talent. This means working on all of the above things like vocal training and stage presence before you search for a manager.

Practice singing with a microphone & PA System

This is one of my best singing tips for anyone wanting to sing on a big stage or record in the studio.

Not everyone can run a PA system* at home – you probably have neighbours. But, if you can’t use one at home, it’s worth hiring a rehearsal room somewhere at least once or twice where you can practice, without an audience, as long as you want. 

You’ll be able to figure out a few things…

What happens when you try to sing fully. Not everyone feels confident to really let loose when they are singing in a quiet room to a backing track. With a loud PA system, you’ll be able to feel what happens to your voice when you really go for it. You might find you start straining more than you did at home. This is something you have to correct if you want to sing live on stage, otherwise you might damage or lose your voice quickly.

You sound different. The sound we hear in our own head is different from how the world hears us because sound vibrates inside our body which goes to our ear, but doesn’t project out of our body. Singing through a PA you will hear some difference in your vocal sound. Recording it and listening back will be even more revealing. Getting to know how your voice sounds out in the world, rather than in your head, will help you understand what changes you need to make to your vocal tone in order to the sound you want for your audience.

You can practice microphone dynamics. Using a microphone looks easy but actually there are good and bad ways to use one. If you have the microphone in the same position at all times, relative to your mouth, you are likely to have some notes blast out and others be hard to hear. For an audience, they want to hear your vocal performance from start to finish, clearly. So, learning to move towards and away from the mic depending on the volume of the note you’ll sing, will make you sound better to the audience.

Choose The Right Songs For You / Change The Key If Needed

This is one of my sneakier tips to become a better singer. Rather than working hard for the songs, make the songs work for you…

You definitely should not choose songs solely based on what you like to listen to. They should also be suitable for your voice. All the notes within the song should fit in your vocal range so you never have to strain your voice to sing them – this can make it seem like you can sing better instantly.

The style of song should also fit with your vocal sound. No point trying to sing punk music if you have a soft voice that would better suit ballads or jazz. (unless you come up with a unique fusion sound!)

The most emotionally powerful notes of the song should fit into the part of your range where your voice is at it’s best. For many people, this is their range for about 1 octave just below their vocal break (where they switch from chest to head voice). If you need to change the key of a song by a couple of semitones down or up in order to make your voice work it at the best point in your range, do it.

How To Get Better At Singing: Learn From The Experts

Very few top pro singers have made it where they are without singing lessons. No matter how good your “natural voice” is, most singers run into technique issues which:

  • Hold them back from singing higher
  • Leave them with a sore voice after singing for an hour or more
  • Stand out to agents, talent show judges and casting directors – yes, just because you think you sing great, and even if you learned how to sing in tune and have a nice natural tone, a professional judge can still hear all the technical problems you have with your voice. Sounding quite good and being technically good are two different things!

You could get discovered and make it by luck alone. Or you could stack the deck in your favor by simply getting professional, structured lessons from someone who can show you how to solve the above issues, and more.

When I was 21 I went to a vocal tutor. I was already making some money singing at bars and clubs. I knew my technique needed work, but I thought my vocal tone was in great shape. My tutor said, lets record your vocal tone every month with the same song, and see how it changes and then you can decide at the end, after listening back to all the recordings, whether your vocal tone is already at its best.

Not surprisingly, even after just a few lessons I already realised how much better my tone could be and was already seeing results. What was most astonishing to me at the time was we didn’t directly work on tone during those early lessons. We just worked on breathing, muscle tension, scales etc. The fundamentals. My tone improved automatically as a result of those fundamentals, within a matter of weeks. After the fundamentals became automatic to me, then I could work directly on ultimate control of my tone. Vocal freedom.

If I hadn’t taken those lessons, I’d probably just have stayed as an average club singer in my home town. Instead I went on to secure auditions and work which took me all over the world.

Back then, an expensive personal tutor was the only option. Today, world class tutors have created outstanding online courses, so you can learn from the top vocal coaches for way less than a local tutor in your home town.

If a couple of hundred dollars (or less!) was all it took to go from an average singer to a professional level singer, would you think it was worth the money?

Stay motivated. Learn the best technique, in the right order. Get the vocal results that will make a real difference to becoming a pro level singer:

Check out my list of recommendations for the best Online Singing Courses

 


Tommo J Williams
Tommo J Williams

I've worked as a full time singer and musician since 2006. My singing has taken me around the world, performing on 5 continents and getting paid to do so. I want to help you achieve your singing dreams.