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Vocal Problems: Why So Many Artists Struggle To Stay at Full Volume by Jason Lipshutz | August 20, 2012 2:00 EDT
Artists in this Article
John Mayer
Adele
Santigold
Imagine Dragons
Christina Perri
Imagine Dragons has a hit single on rock radio and a hotly anticipated album hitting stores in less than a month. Too bad the group's singer can't utter a word.
"At first, it was devastating for me," Reynolds wrote in an email, "but after I've heard all the success stories of other artists who go through the same thing, I felt a lot more at ease."
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For some, vocal problems have resulted in a massive monetary loss: For instance, a hemorrhaged vocal cord forced Adele to scrap 16 U.S. theater and club shows last fall, at the pinnacle of her "21" success. Earlier in 2011, 10 sold-out Adele performances at similarly sized venues grossed $1.9 million, according to Billboard Boxscore.
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Although "Born and Raised" debuted atop the Billboard 200 and has sold 442,000 copies since its May release, according to SoundScan, Mayer will need vocal surgery before the end of the summer, and an undefined recuperation period will follow. "The recovery process isn't easy, and you literally can't talk for weeks," says Michael McDonald, Mayer's manager. "Caffeine, alcohol, spicy foods -- all that stuff is out of your diet, so you literally have to just sit in silence for a period until you can talk."
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These circumstances can be especially nerve-racking for a little-known artist trying to establish his or her voice as it physically decays. Pop-rock singer Christina Perri, best-known for her 2010 hit "Jar of Hearts," says that a Los Angeles ear-nose-throat doctor found a congenital cyst on her vocal cords in August 2010, one month after she signed a deal with Atlantic Records and just after "Hearts" made its network TV debut on "So You Think You Can Dance." The doctor told her that it was the sort of condition that would eventually require surgery.
"My career had just started," Perri says. "I was like, 'What? I can't have surgery now.' And everyone, like the label and my manager, were like, 'It's really not the time.' There's no way I could've stopped." Perri underwent surgery in Boston in August 2011, after a year of performing that was physically "difficult and challenging," and her voice only returned to feeling 100% earlier this summer. "Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato
https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0 | |
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Great voices (some of them) but bad technique..... | |
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Thanks for this interesting article!
What blows my mind is singers on the opposite end of the spectrum, like Jennifer Holliday. She did Dreamgirls 6 days a week for almost 4 years!
I guess it's all about technique... "Keep in mind that I'm an artist...and I'm sensitive about my shit."--E. Badu | |
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Vocal cords are muscles, they get tired and need rest.
I'm sure Jennifer Holiday had her share of off days. We don't have any footage of the original Dreamgirls except for the Tony Awards.
When I'm singing in the shower or car ( ) my throat starts to hurt after a while. I SLAY when I'm by myself. | |
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No, they aren't. They're folds of mucus membrane. Not even remotely like muscles.
gemari77 nailed it - a lot of it boils down to bad technique. A lot of "singers" aren't trained, at all - which exacerbates any throat- or voice-related weakness they might already have.
Vocal training helps a singer to work in such a way that the vocal cords are protected (as much as they can be, at least). Still, it's possible for vocal cords to be damaged through overuse (rest is vital, even during the rigors of a tour). Age can be another factor, as can smoking. We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves. | |
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I think that there are also other factors that lead to vocal cord problems. If you do not have a competent sound operator/technician, you can damage your vocal cords. Having the monitor(s) set at a prpoer volume can cause the singer to strain his or her voice. The try to sing louder because they cannot hear themselves. I guess that's why Prince wears a earpiece to hear the mix.
el_callejero There must be a reason why...
I don't know. Allen, Brown, Dickerson, Jordan, Miller, Oskar and Scott. 1971 Far Out Productions | |
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I remember being told that a lot of singers dont' have good technique, like the way they sing actually damages their vocal chords. Example, Adele, the way she sings actually hurts her and I believe that she drinks and smokes too right? Definitely, not good. I think another one was Whitney Houston as well. She really hurt herself by singing the way that she did. | |
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Them bitches can't sing in the first place | |
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Smoking is probably somewhat to blame in many if not all cases. For instance, Adele smokes like a chimney. I was not surprised her voice got ruined. | |
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Depending on what type of music the artists sing (especially women) some of them can get by later on with a smoking-affected voice. Whitney's chain-smoking relative Dionne Warwick comes to mind... But smoking is the one thing guaranteed to kill your voice...providing you had one in the first place! "Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato
https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0 | |
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Many reasons for this:
ONE and this is the main reason, no one is geared to this job plain and simple. Since records really dont cut it anymore, you gotta tour, and 99% of those coming out, are thrust into the spotlight with no touring experience at all. I recently watched an interview with Jon Farris and Andrew Farris of INXS and they said back in 1980-81 before they even had a minor hit in the USA at all, they had played 200-300 gigs, thats more than Lady Gaga Adele have done added together in their careers. Lets face it, no one has the chops to do long tours, i look at tours that artists go on now and they are like 10-20 dates, thats not a fucking tour, but its really all they can get through, and its not a shot at the talent, its just them not being ready for it.
SECOND the folks doing the training suck, i remember an episode of that show that Danity Kane had before Diddy gave them the gate, they were in the studio and this cat came in named POOH BEAR, too talk about vocals and was telling them how to sing, and i remember seeing it listed that he worked with all these other ladies like Xtina, Beyonce etc....which first of all is bad when the same guy is training different pepople to do the same singing style, also POOH BEAR, sounds like he should be making kids cereal not talking how to sing.
"We went where our music was appreciated, and that was everywhere but the USA, we knew we had fans, but there is only so much of the world you can play at once" Magne F | |
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Stupid title for an article. That in itself is a reason for many vocal problems - shouting and not singing. Many singers' voice are ruined - Alicia Keys has damaged her voice, as can be heard. Far too young for that to happen. Mariah too.
Bad vocal technique is the norm these days. | |
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Although I don't agree with a lot of your posts--I side with you on this one. "Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato
https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0 | |
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I was just talking about this "new" phenomenon of throat surgery/problems with my daughter's friend's mom. My daughter is in the Los Angeles Children's Chorus, and her friend auditioned and just got in for this coming season. The mom said that it took a little bit of convincing to get her daughter to accept the offer to join, because her daughter wants to do voice lessons for pop singing, or do those "Glee" camp things for schoolkids - pop songs like Katy Perry, Journey, whatever's been on "Glee." The girl was a little wary of "classical" bel canto singing. In the end, of course she accepted because my daughter is already in it and told her it was really great. But I was telling the mom what a GREAT job they do with voice training, and how they take the child's voice very seriously, with great care. Bel canto singing does not damage the child's vocal chords, and meanwhile the child is learning great techniques, which they can then use when they sing "pop" when they are older (beyond the amount they sing anyway in the car and in the shower). They learn sight reading, warm ups, harmonizing, diction, phrasing... There are 8 and 9 year olds belting out pop songs in those "Glee" style camps, but you've got to look at the long-term. It's like ballet - you are not supposed to put 6 year olds on pointe on their developing feet and joints. If you want long-term enjoyment of the art, you need to wait until the child is developmentally ready. Many voice/singing teachers for kids are not taking that care - they just want to get the child sounding like broadway or Whitney Houston ASAP.
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Exactly. But then again, why should this field be exempt from the instant gratification that pervades society as a whole? (<-- sarcasm alert)
As an aside, I took tap from a teacher that absolutely refuses to take any students under the age of 7 - the age at which she feels a child is mentally, physically and psychologically ready to handle the rigors of that form of dance. She said she's had parents who weren't very happy about it, but she sticks to her guns.
Also...Pat Benatar was trained as an opera singer before she got into rock/pop. We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves. | |
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