How Your Skull Gives You a “Beautiful” Voice | #shorts #voice

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I love the fact that you are covering this topic. I am a singer, and I found a post somewhere, quite a while ago, showing that this is the reason, along with the enclosed skull, why we are never able to hear our own voice, the way that others hear it.

corywalker
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If only my nasal cavities gave me a beautiful voice 🥹🥹🥹

IntegraDIY
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This is also the reason why people sound different when they hear a recording of their own voice. the way we hear our own voice is altered to us by the resonating of our skull.

shonuff
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I love how the caption has beautiful in parentheses 💀

ainsleycalhoun
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I heard a voice teacher talk about it but I am so happy to finally see it thanks to you. It makes more sense now.

PaolaBarrientos
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Yeah singers are trained to sing in their "face mask" to create better resonance.

theblankyblankness
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"Enhance the quality of your beautiful voice"

Or amplify the annoyingly nassal characteristics of my nails on chalk board voice. I am NOT barry white, I'm more of a Ben Stein from Clear Eyes commercial

ericolens
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That makes so much sense! I guess this is the reason people sound "nasally" if they have a stuffy nose or swollen adenoids.

jlynec
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Would love to learn more about why I can't breathe at random points throughout the day, and why my nose is always stuffy & running even if I blow so hard that I might burst a blood vessel

Ryan-opyd
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🥺 I've been told my voice is to resonate....

Leotheviolist
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Tip from a singer:
- Find two long + sturdy pieces of cardstock or "thick" paper, for example a manila folder or posterboard
- Hold the pieces of cardstock right in front of your ears, perpendicular to your head, and then sing or speak.
- What you will hear is what the ROOM is hearing, as opposed to only hearing your voice in your own head with the resonance chambers there to trick your brain. It's not a perfect replica of the way you sound to other people, but you will definitely notice a difference and sometimes it helps to practice with the cardstock so you can get a better idea of what your "real" voice sounds like!

jerrythemagicalllama
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That makes so much sense I've smoked for 25 years on top of being a metal vocalist and may voice at this point is just bass and gravel it sounds like I'm growling when I talk haha

WhatwouldRoddyPiperdo
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Very cool to SEE what I've only ever learned about in theory as an Opera singer (well, I've seen illustrations, but that's never quite the same lol). Very, _very_ cool! Thanks! 😊

dorabrooks
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So that's why when I'm singing in the Choir I get that resonation between my eyebrows near my sinuses. At times it can be quite uncomfortable!

ziggystardust
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I wonder if there was something different about Karen Carpenters sinuses. She had a beautiful speaking and singing voice.

joncampos
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I’m so obsessed with these videos! I’m so happy I found this channel. I wish I had them in nursing school!

Superabigail
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I’m an expert in voice anatomy, physiology, and acoustics. I teach performers and everyday voice-users for a living. My mentors are otolaryngologists, speech-language pathologists, and audiologists. Technically, the nasal passages act more like acoustic dampeners and have a muffling effect similar to anechoic chambers. When people describe a “nasal” voice, they are usually confusing narrowing of the Aryepiglottic Sphincter (AES) with nasalization of voice. They produce decidedly opposite effects on the voice. Singing/speaking through the nose makes you quieter. Singing/speaking with a narrow AES makes you considerably brighter/louder/twangy sounding. From the other standpoint of quality of the voice being affected by the shape of the nasal cavities, plenty of professional vocalists have had major surgical reconstruction of their sinuses and septum with no noticeable effect on the quality of their voice. The voice is produced and shaped within the vocal tract by the larynx, oropharynx, and oral cavity. This video is not accurate for those reasons and makes my job harder as an educator. Please correct it. Thanks.

jeffreymiller
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My sinuses pop, like your ears pop, while coming to altitude on airplanes! It’s the strangest feeling ever!!!✈️

spikeybunny
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Sueper interesting!
Keep that coming and God bless you 🙏

JJHDZ
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I think i have a deviated septum. Im 95% sure. Im terrified of surgery to fix it. I keep getting sinus infections. I have an apt soon. Super nervous for some reason.

idlehour