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3 Timeless Practice Songs To Improve Your Singing Technique

October 30, 2023

3 Timeless Practice Songs To Improve Your Singing Technique

You don’t need to repetitively practice dull vocal exercises in order to learn good singing technique. And you don’t need to completely eliminate vocal style from your singing in order to train your technique!

Technique and style can coexist in the training process, and are best developed simultaneously. Before we get to the songs you should be singing when you practice, check out the helpful tips below.

8 Tips on Technique for Beginning Singers

1. Anything you sing can be used as a vocal exercise.

2. A vocal exercise can be treated as though it were a song.

3. A song should be learned by breaking it into bits of technique and bits of style, and reassembling it as both, separately. Then fuse the two into your finished product.

4. Your technical song and your stylized song will sound completely different from each other.

5. Just as there is efficient and less efficient vocal technique, there are efficient and less efficient ways to apply vocal style.

6. Technique without style is a dull performance.

7. Style without technique is an incomplete performance, and can lead to vocal deterioration.

8. Technique enhances style. Style informs technique.

Now, here are three timeless and popular songs to sing that are particularly well-suited for your practice sessions. They can each be stylized in a variety of ways.

“Can’t Help Falling in Love”

“Can’t Help Falling in Love” by Weiss, Peretti, and Creatore is one of the best songs to sing for learning to release long notes. Singing a long note while maintaining clear and even tone quality is one hallmark of good singing.

When singing diphthongs, you’ll want to be sure to separate the two vowel sounds to keep from supporting the sound with your jaw or tongue, or overly supporting with your abdomen. Maintaining that true tone quality as the melody moves step-wise up or down is also important.

This song covers the range of an octave plus two notes. Singing the song in two or three keys is a great way to work on intonation throughout the voice range, as well as learn to negotiate the breaks or register shifts that sit in the middle of the main melody.

“Unchained Melody”

The ever-popular tune “Unchained Melody” by North and Zaret is excellent for making interval maneuvers up or down with clear tone quality and rhythmic accuracy, and keeping every note in tune.

For extra fun, try singing the Italian version of the song, “Senza Catene.” The pure Italian vowels are conducive to good singing. You don’t need to speak Italian to sing in Italian.

Singing in another language can actually help turn the focus of your practice to technique, over performance. A singer who is unable to emotionally detach from the words of a song in order to do the detail work of simply making it sound good might benefit from this approach.

“Ave Maria”

A vocal selection that emerged in recent times and gained popularity is the “Ave Maria” written by Vladimir Vavilov in the 1970s and erroneously attributed to Baroque composer Giulio Caccini.

The long lines in this song require a centered tone, coupled with well-managed breath and support. While the song might appeal more to classical singers, the simplicity of the tune and chord structure could lend themselves nicely to an R&B rendering, or a light jazz setting.

Adventurous pop genre singers take note: you might have something unique to add to the mix. It isn’t what you sing that matters. It’s how you sing it that matters!

Want even more song recommendations? Check out our list of 400+ songs to sing for every occasion.

author

Suzy S.