Hey guys welcome back again to Ken Tamplin Vocal Academy, where the PROOF is in the SINGING!
I’d like to discuss how to sing any song, and this is really important because what
you’re going to find is that you think you are hearing certain vowel sounds, when in fact
you’re actually not when you hear a really great singer.
A lot of times we think of singing like we speak.
In fact, we really don’t sing like we speak.
And here’s what I mean by that.
If I were to sing a line in a song, and let’s say the line was "I’m sailing a-way, set
an open course for the virgin sea."
What you’re going to learn is, now I’m going to sing it like Dennis DeYoung would’ve
sung the song: I’m sailing away, set an open course for the virgin sea.
He really pushes the sound in mask into the front of the face.
He’s a phenomenal singer, by the way, and still out there doing it today, killing it,
But I bring this up because there are what are called vowel transitions.
Now what I like to do is I like to get my students to start off working up their songs
But how do we work up songs with vowel only first, if those vowels - and we don’t understand
their relationship to each other, and we're just going through and singing a song, we
can over-sing those vowels, okay?
So let’s say, let me speak that line to you.
Set an open course for the virgin sea.
Now I wouldn’t go: “I’m sailing a way.
Set an open course for the virgin sea…”
Maybe in theater we might want to do that because we’re trying to accentuate the lyrics
and we want the last person in the row, in the last row to understand what we’re saying.
But for the most part, we want to break this stuff down a vowel at a time.
And we want to actually eliminate consonants altogether.
So what I encourage my students to do is to take a song that they love, whatever that
song is, and eliminate the consonants altogether.
And then we’re going to talk about vowels in a second, so… (singing in vowels only)
Okay.
Now, there is what I call vowel substitutions.
Now, these vowel substitutions vary, and they’re not constant.
In fact I just saw one vocal coach put out something here recently, it’s
I’d like to make some adjustments to this because there’s some incorrect information
in that, and if she’s listening, hopefully she’ll benefit from this, because this is
30 years of experience of doing this for a really long time.
And those vowel substitutions are as follows: In the English language, we have somewhere
between 12 and 16 different vowels.
In Bel Canto or in Latin, and Italian, there are five.
Now, I’ve studied Bel Canto most of my life, and I like to use that first as a premise
by which all other vowel sounds happen.
However, it falls very short of, the traditional vowels of Bel Canto fall very short of contemporary
vowels that we use in the English language.
So if I go La, Ah, Ah, Ooh, Oh, Ah, Aye, Ee, Ee, Ee, Eeeee…
This is called, I’m going to show you something called Vocal Tract Shaping, where we actually
shape the vowels themselves to morph easily from one vowel to the next.
So we want to take the path of least resistance, or from one vowel into the next vowel so that
when those vowels join, or are married together to each other, you can actually have a smooth
transition, keeping the maximum space in the back of the throat, the least amount of jaw
movement, the least amount of tongue movement, and the least amount of over – exaggeration
Now, the higher up we go, and this is where this other coach has given out some information
– good information, by the way, there’s some good info there for sure, absolutely…
It sounded like she, we somehow crossed paths with the same information.
But within this, the higher up we go, the smaller those vowel sounds need to happen.
So if I were to go to do this really high, instead of when I just went Lah, ah, ah, Ooh,
You know, Ooh, Oh, Ah, Eh, Ee?
If I were to go really high, Lah, ah, ah, Ooh, Oh, Ah, Eh, Ee, Ee, Eeee…
Did you notice that there was almost no change in the vowels themselves?
So the higher up we go up this food chain of these vowels, the more compressed, or the
smaller spaces that we get within the vowel structures themselves.
And we take the path of least resistance from one vowel to another.
Well, this is far more than just a simple quick tutorial here.
But there’s something called the Family Of Vowels, and the vowels, how they relate
So as we go up, we convert these vowels.
So if we were to sing “I” for example, and this is where this other coach is correct.
“I” converts to Ah, but not in every case.
So if I go, I don’t go “I-eee”.
And, by the way, we talked about diphthongs and some other stuff.
You don’t necessarily go “I-eee” and close the vowel there, you go “I-e”…
at the very end you can add just a little bit of the EE and I, or Ah.
Now, the higher up we go, if I sing “I” then all of a sudden, it takes on the Persona
more of an Aa, or Aa-Aye in the sound.
And I know this sounds complicated, and it is a little bit, but these vowels shift, and
they change the higher up we go in the food chain, depending on what we’re singing,
and the intensity of what we’re singing, and also the vowels themselves.
So I would never sing a pure EE.
Now let me demonstrate this in a different kind of way.
We talk about a vowel holding its shape, right?
The shape of the vowel, and then having a quick diphthong at the end, and then curving
into the “speaking level sound” of the vowel, but actually there’s vowels as we
go up top we don’t ever sing in the purity of the vowel itself.
I don’t go (high pitch) “EEEEE”.
I go “Aye” quickly, like A-y-e, “Aye-eeeee”, and I can gently roll into the Aye-EE, into
that vowel, and then all of a sudden, I’m making you think I sang EE the whole time.
Buy I used “Aye” as the portal, or the tunnel, the portal, the bridge to get to that.
If I’m on the bottom and I sang “Oooohhhh” I could do that on the bottom, but the higher
up I go “Oh-oooooh” I go “Oh-oooh” and the higher up the food chain I go even
than that is “Oh-oooooooo”, right?
So I use oh to get to ooh, and I roll into ooh.
And I don’t wait to the very end to give a diphthong at the end, it’s: “Oh-oooooh”
because I want to get to the purity of that vowel, and I want to find that placement of
that cool little amphitheater that we hit that perfect little pocket in the back of
So this becomes really important, how we relate these vowels.
So let’s get back to how we can sing any song in any style, is we start out, again:
We started with just the vowels and no consonants.
As we translate those vowels from one vowel to another, we find vowels that have the path
So an excellent way, and I mean an excellent way to practice this is to practice ooh, oh,
ah, aye, and EE, as transitional vowels, and I’m going to do a scale here in a minute,
And reverse those vowels in a different kind of way and sing aye, ee, ah, oh, and ooh.
Now what we really need to remember is EE, as we continue to go higher, can be translated
to eh, like “led” or Aye-EE, like the number Eight.
This other vocal coach says to sing “ih” on certain vowels.
That is patently false, and absolutely dead wrong.
In the lower registration you can do that.
The higher up we go, we actually avoid “ih” like ih, like Lid.
Or oo like hook, if we go up too high.
“Ih”, goes to “eh”, e-h, like “ehhhh”.
I don’t go “ihhhhhhh”… ih,ih,ih,ih!
So if I sing “I’m gonna flip my lid”… “gonnah fl-ehp mah L-ehd” You hear the
Aye, Aye-EE, like the number Eight come in?
I didn’t go “I’m gonna flip my lid”, right?
It’s too much tension, in fact you’ll start to notice that your larynx will start
So there’s a lot of little nuances.
I cover all of this in my singing course.
But there’s a lot of these little nuances that will help you like crazy when you’re
But I want to do just a couple of quick scales where you can identify how closely these vowels
are related in the throat, and how we can build this vowel structure.
Now, there’s a lot more to it than this but this is an awesome start.
So we’re going to start by going lah on the bottom, like the Doctor wants to see your
tonsils, keeping the maximum space, remembering the breath and the engine that drives your
car, and were going to go Ooh, Oh, Ah, Aye, EE.
Lah, ah, ah, Ooh, Oh, Ah, Aye, Ee, Ee, Ee, Eeeee
Now, the higher up I go, the smaller the spaces.
Now, the space is the big in the throat, in that we want to create the most space as possible,
but we actually want to compress the vowels to make them smaller, the higher up we go.
Lah, ah, ah, Ooh, Oh, Ah, Aye, Ee, Ee, Ee, Eeeee
Lah, ah, ah, Ooh, Oh, Ah, Aye, Ee, Ee, Ee, Eeeee
Do you hear the higher up the food chain it goes, the smaller I make the space?
Now, the higher I go up from here, the more I bring mask into the sound, and I push the
Lah, ah, ah, Ooh, Oh, Ah, Aye, Ee, Ee, Ee, Eeeee
So I’m not carrying so much girth or mass up in the throat with me, and I compress the
When we combine this with the songs that you’re singing, you’re going to notice that all
of a sudden you’re going to have all of this freedom in the throat that you never
knew you had, and then gently, little by little, you start to reintroduce the consonant sounds
as you can, to keep that throat open.
Now there’s something called glottal stops, which are “guh, guh, guh…”
Any time that the glottis closes down and air stops the flow.
So, Um, buh, things that close down.
“Maybe”.
You can substitute those consonants with different consonants.
Like, instead of going “maybe, maybe, maybe, maybe…”
You can use small things like a ”v”.
Until you can force the throat to stay open, because in the back of the epiglottis is closing
across the trachea and allowing air to come up, and in the case of diphthongs that we
talked about a minute ago, it’s trying to differentiate airflow coming out of the mouth
And the back of the throat’s going “Hey could you make up your mind, here?
Do you want air to come out of the mouth, or do you want it to come out of the nose?
Now I’m going to cover this again.
That’s actually in a whole other subject that has to do with called glottal stops.
We’ll get to that in another subject.
I cover all of this in my singing course, guys.
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Okay?
Out.