Awhile ago, there was a thread about singing Queen songs and sounding not so good - I can't find it now. I have the Queen karaoke dvd, and it is great fun; however, when I turn the lead/vocals off, who let the croaking frogs in the room? Oh, dear - that's me. Anyway, I was wondering if Queenzoners doing Freddie open their mouths as wide as he does. That is very hard to do. Jaws get very tired. I have a question for Queen music experts. Does how wide you open your mouth make a great deal of difference when you sing? Does the sound come out differently? In the early years when Queen was doing more ballady sounding songs such as at Hyde Park, was Freddie's mouth not so open, or is that a natural thing to do when singing softer songs. And when the hard-hitting rock and roll songs came about, did he start opening his mouth wider to give the songs more punch.
deleted user 04.04.2006 16:34
i usually find its because when it comes to hard rock ballads you almost shout them, to blast more energy into it, while with softer ones you more or less just talk gently with it.
I've noticed a lisp on occasion, too, but I don't think that has been talked about on this board - not that there is anything wrong with that. I have no music, chorus, choir, or singing training or experience which is why I am curious about the subject.
You're suppossed to open your mouth wide to get certain vocal qualities. To get a more resonant head voice and full voice and to add whisper to certain parts of your vocal.
i can only tell for opera singers (but it should be similar to every singer) - it depends on each person, - there are people whose voice sounds much louder and more voluminous when they open their mouth, - but for the soubrette voices for example it's quite uncommon to open the mouth very wide, you need a very fine&high voice, and you get this better with other techniques.
(sry if this sounds confusing, i should better explain that in german ;)