3 Miley Cyrus Miley Ray Hemsworth (born Destiny Hope Cyrus), known as Miley Cyrus, is an American singer, songwriter, and actress. She was born on November 23, 1992, in Franklin, Tennessee, to Tish Cyrus and Billy Ray Cyrus. Her voice type is Mezzo-Soprano and has 4 octaves.
I have an Acer computer with Windows 10 OS. I have made some voice recordings that I want to burn onto a blank CD. I downloaded a file converter and converted them into an mp4 format. When I have clicked on the burn to CD button the computer tells me that they are finished being burned, however when I take the CD out of the tray and play it on a CD player, it is blank and the player says 'No disk inserted' so it doesn't even recognize the burned CD. How do I successfully get my recording to burn onto a blank CD so I can play it and hear it?
So I'm going to teach you today a few tips about how to learn from other singers. The truth is that every singer out there learned from other singers.
We listen to singers and we copy them, we emulate them. We learn their phrasing, their tone, how they use their vibrato. And these are ways that we start to use their techniques with our own voice. So I recommend it in the beginning.Ultimately, we don't want to copy another singer. But there are these great songs and these great voices out there that we have so much to learn from.
So in the beginning I always have singers sing along with a lot of songs that they love, and their voice will get better because you will learn a lot by copying them. So what do I mean by learn from other singers? I mean by listening to their phrasing and studying their phrasing, how they're approaching delivering their lines. What is the emotional interpretation behind what they're singing? Like don't just listen on a surface level, listen on a deeper level and tear it apart.
What are their vocal textures? What are their dynamics?
You know if you just sing along with them and sing on top of them and you don't really listen, you're not really going to learn that much. So it's a combination of singing along with them and listening that's going to give you those inside secrets to how they're making their sound happen. The trick is understanding that your voice is going to be always different than those singers you're listening to, but you have so much to benefit from listening to them. And then once you've got it down, then practice with an instrumental track, find one on Youtube of that song.
Sing through it, sing it down a few times like that singer did but then try to ad-lib a little bit and add some of your own voice. Try to let their voice sort of fade into the background in your mind and bring forward what your voice wants to do and how it wants to move and try some things.One of the things I suggest is play the instrumental track and just ad-lib over it as if you were a horn or a guitar soloing you know. Even just sing on a vowel and try to make up some notes and stretch your ear outside of the notes that are within the song. Then go back to the melody and try to add your own twist to it.