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I have a friend, who is not professionally trained in music. When she hums (with her mouth closed), she hits the right notes and everything. When she actually starts to sing, I felt her notes appear to be all over the place. I have caught her singing when she is not aware she's singing...sort of like she's singing subconsciously, and she managed to hit right notes again. What gives? Is this simply a case of lack of practice?

2 Answers 2

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Short answer: The behavior you describe is pretty common, and the result of a combination of physiological and psychological differences.

Longer answer: First, humming increases the "internal resonance" your vocal chords produce. This increases your ability to hear yourself while humming, and so if you have any ability to perceive tone, you will also be better able to tune yourself while humming than while singing.

Also, because the air is leaving through your nose, a smaller opening than your mouth, you're introducing more "back pressure", which in moderation actually improves most of the positioning of the diaphragm, mouth, throat and nasal passages that are taught by vocal coaches as "good technique". The throat widens, the soft palate lifts, and the nasal passages open. In addition, because of the back pressure, your exhalation is controlled with less concentration on your part. This results in less variation in tone due to changes in positioning of these things which can push pitches around.

This phenomenon is used by many vocal coaches during warm-ups, to encourage the singers to maintain what they feel when humming as they open their mouth. By doing so, the singers naturally adopt many good habits that can be further tweaked by the coach.

There are also some psychological things at play. If you cannot hear yourself well, or don't want anyone to hear you, you will naturally sing more quietly. For an untrained singer, the two "natural" ways to do this are to drop the breath support (which drops the pitch; imagine the sound a bagpipes makes as the bladder runs out of air and the drones stop), or to close off the throat (which normally pinches notes sharp). Both are bad technique; the "right" way to sing more softly is to use the diaphragm to reduce the amount of air going through the vocal chords without completely dropping breath support. Simply being nervous, knowing that people are listening, will also make a singer trend sharp because of the natural tensing of a whole host of muscles controlling breath and voice.

Being nervous coupled with bad singing technique will cause notes to go totally wild, as the lack of breath control pushes notes flat while the nervousness trends them upward, and one or the other will "win" on each note.

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  • Hmm, but your "when an untrained singer tries to be quiet, the notes are off" doesn't agree with the OPs description, does it? When the person mentioned doesn't think someone's hearing her, I'd suspect she does sing quietly. At least more quietly than when she sings "in public". Dec 8, 2011 at 22:46
  • When a person knows they are being listened to, they will tense up, and if they don't want to be listened to they will reduce their volume. Both of these will cause the "tug of war" I mentioned where the lack of breath support pulls flat while the tensing up pushes sharp.
    – KeithS
    Dec 8, 2011 at 23:25
  • KeithS, great answer!
    – user1044
    Sep 22, 2012 at 15:28
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Weird! It's probably to do with psychology of performance and social pressures. I base this on the presumptions that:

  1. She doesn't see herself as a singer.
  2. When she's not paying attention to herself, she sounds fine.

Since you have observed her being pitch-accurate (whether singing or humming), we can conclude that she has at least a rudimentary ear, even if it isn't well-developed through training. A rudimentary ear--able to hear a melody, internalize it at some level, and then replicate it--is all one really needs to be able to sing socially (i.e. hold a tune in a bucket, sing in key). There is virtually no difference between singing and humming (humming is simply singing on an 'm' sound).

I would guess that when her notes are all over the place, she's in a sort of "I don't sing; this is what it sounds like when I try to sing" mindset. What results from this mindset are behaviors or habits that are counterproductive to actually singing in key. Maybe she thinks she has to "oversoul" it, sing too loudly, or maybe she's just yelling because the alternative is too embarrassing. I have no idea; you'll have to figure that one out for yourself.

To resolve the issue:

  1. She has to want to sing, and understand that singing is fun and is really nothing like what you see on TV.
  2. She has to agree that she can hum in key.
  3. She has to understand that singing is just humming with one's mouth open.

For an exercise, she could try humming a simple tune on an 'mmmm' syllable, then try it on an 'nnnnn'. Then, slowly and on each note, start on 'nnnnn' before opening to 'aaaaa', and then do the same with 'mmmmmaaaaaaaa'. Last, use only the 'ah' syllable.

That's about as broken-down as I think it can get. Let me know in a comment if any of this was the least bit helpful or applicable to your situation!

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  • I'd say, more than "wanting" (which seems to be important, no argument) she has to believe in herself, her ability. Your point 2 is, I think much more important. (Spoken from personal experience of insecurity) Dec 8, 2011 at 22:48
  • she actually gave a couple of "bad" performances and 1-2 people directly and indirectly suggested that singing is not meant for her.... since then, even if her notes are in place, her voice simply shakes! she really wants to sing, but... anyway, ever since I brought her attention to her humming quality, it seems to have gone down as well. she told me she sings even worse when she's alone. She wants to practice but she's afraid if she practices using wrong technique, she may do more harm than good?
    – TPR
    Dec 16, 2011 at 22:09
  • @JürgenA.Erhard, yes, but the thing is sometimes she sings pretty good, sometimes not... so I see the potential, but she can not feel secure with such fluctuation in quality.
    – TPR
    Dec 16, 2011 at 22:10
  • @progtick And the quality will fluctuate as long as she doesn't feel secure. I don't see any other even potential reason. If she can sing, at least some of the time, she can. It's only her mind that's in the way. And yes, we have a Catch-22 there... Dec 17, 2011 at 14:07
  • @JürgenA.Erhard ... this catch-22 must also have a solution... have one in mind? :)
    – TPR
    Dec 18, 2011 at 21:55

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