Experienced Private Teacher of
A great many experiences and studies have gone into my teaching technique. More than ten years ago, in the late 1980s, I first learnt some of the vocal control manoeuvres developed by Jo Estill. I did this through being a 'guinea pig' myself in one of Jo's workshops in Perth. Around that time I went to a weekend workshop on her techniques run in Adelaide by another singing teacher and a speech pathologist. A 16 minute video of my own vocal folds in motion was made at the workshop. They had put a video camera up my nose and down the other side!
And in 1997 / 98 I did six months of extra study and revision in some aspects of Jo's work with Ros Barnes, an accredited teacher of the Estill method. (Note, however, that I am NOT an Estill teacher.)
Of course, in my early days doing a Bachelor of Music (composition) at the University of Western Australia I sang in all the choirs around the place. I had the great privilege to work under many wonderful choral conductors.
But I didn't start learning solo singing until I landed a 22 hour-a-week job playing piano for singing lessons in Sydney in the early 1980s. After a week or so listening to Jean Callaghan giving tuition to her many pupils, I was so impressed that I asked if I could learn too. In 1985 I moved back to Perth. To date I've had six actual singing teachers.
In the mid to late 1980s the "Australian National Association of Teachers of Singing" was forming, and I became the Secretary / Treasurer of the WA Chapter. In that year I helped to organise several events for our members and their students. Over the years I have attended (and in the early years helped to organise) many ANATS presentations from speech pathologists, an ENT specialist, language teachers, and many others.
On my own I have spent countless hours pouring over (as in really studying) many important voice textbooks. I have studied countless videos and diagrams of the larynx. Once, a student who was a nurse at a teaching hospital, arranged for us both to view a collection of a dozen diseased larynxes kept in jars. While we were looking at them, the people in charge wheeled in a 'fresh one'. Use your imagination! Using the surgical gloves they supplied us with, we dug around looking all through the vocal mechanism, trying to find the actual vocal folds. We couldn't see them, even though the whole vocal tract had been cut open. I think you need to have a 'live' one to see them.
Also around that time, I lost my voice. This lead me to have six weeks of speech therapy. Now THAT was a useful experience. I draw on what I learnt there every day.
And a couple of ideas have been borrowed from the American teacher, Seth Riggs. He has a very useful technique for smoothing out the register breaks. Works like a treat.
At high school (a very long time ago, back in last century) I took German for my TAE (year 12 exams). And I did a year of French in what we called "First Year". When I took up learning to sing, in 1984, my first teacher was absolutely brilliant at German and Italian, so that's what I learnt for 18 months. After I returned to Perth in 1985 I studied "Italian 110" (i.e. for beginners) at the Uni of WA. And along the way I have had a few formal lessons in Putonghua (Mandarin Chinese) and Bahasa Indonesia. And, of course, I also teach singing in Latin.
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