Transcription:
Any thoughts on studying voice and how it’s helped your craft, your ability?(…) It helps in a really, in an unconscious manner, I think, a lot of the times. Because if you’re, when we’re doing scales or whatnot, the first thing I noticed, I was using my voice, you know, practicing with you two times a week, sometimes three. But what happened was, when I went to sit down on the guitar, I would go to notes that I wasn’t going to before. Yeah. They become more natural for you, and you’re not scared of them anymore. And another thing is giving yourself more confidence in that mid-range. I used to think of that mid-range as high for me because it was powerful,(…) but I can actually think way higher than that. And now, after practicing, I’m realizing that mid-range is actually the sweet spot where, you know, my voice sounds like me and like nobody else. Once you get better at singing, going for the big thing is higher than it was before. But it doesn’t mean it sounds that good. Oh, I know. I know. I tell everybody, just because you can sing those notes doesn’t mean you should. Yes. You know, if you work on those notes, it makes everything below that sweeter.(…) And easier. And easier. And easier. And it sounds with more control.