Techniques, exercises, and science-backed insights to improve your singing.
Pitch accuracy is the foundation of good singing. Here's how to train your ear and voice to hit the right notes consistently.
Lip trills are the single most effective vocal warmup. Here's the science behind why they work and how to do them correctly.
Vibrato is a hallmark of a trained voice, but forcing it creates a wobble. Here's how vibrato actually works and how to develop it naturally.
Most breathing advice for singers is vague or wrong. Here are four specific exercises that build the breath support you actually need.
Range extension is one of the most sought-after vocal skills and one of the most misunderstood. Here's how to add notes safely.
Understanding your vocal registers is the key to singing smoothly across your range. Here's what's actually happening in your throat.
Harmony singing is a learnable skill, not a gift. Here's how to train your ear and voice to hold a harmony part confidently.
Vocal agility isn't about speed — it's about precision. Here's how to build runs and riffs that sound intentional, not sloppy.
Hearing your recorded voice and cringing is universal. Here's the science behind why it happens and how to close the gap.
Talent is overrated. The singers who improve fastest follow a structured progression system. Here's why the belt system works.
Short on time? This 5-minute warmup routine covers everything you need before singing. No fluff, just the essentials.
Interval recognition is the bridge between hearing music and reproducing it. Here's how to train your ear to identify and sing any interval.
Folk singing isn't about a "pretty" voice. It's about directness, storytelling, and a specific set of techniques that serve the song.
Your voice is the only instrument you can't replace. Here's what actually matters for keeping it healthy — and what's just myth.
Most singers don't practice — they just sing songs. Here's a structured 15-minute daily routine that builds real vocal skills.
Articulation is the difference between a singer who sounds polished and one who sounds amateur. Here's how to train both staccato and legato.
Singing in tune is not about your throat — it's about your brain. Here's the neuroscience behind pitch perception and how to train it.
Volume control is one of the most expressive tools a singer has — and one of the hardest to master. Here's how to build it.
The shape of your mouth determines the quality of your sound. Here's how to use vowel modification to unlock your voice's full resonance.
Country singing has specific vocal techniques that define the genre. Here's how to develop authentic twang, phrasing, and emotional delivery.