The Voice Science Podcast
Your Choir Director Is Your Real Voice Teacher — For Better or Worse | The Voice Science Podcast Has your choir director ever told you to "open your mouth," "create more back space," or "raise your soft palate" — and you had no idea whether you were actually doing it right? You're not alone. And the stakes are higher than most people realize. A 2019 study by Chorus America reported that 54 million US adults and children sing in choirs. That means for the vast majority of singers, the choir rehearsal — not the private lesson — is where all the voice training is happening. In this episode, contributor Timothy Wilds unpacks what that really means: for choir directors, for choir members, and for the long-term vocal health of anyone who has ever stood in a section and tried to follow their director's instructions. You'll learn: * Why the choir rehearsal is the primary site of voice training — and why that matters * The real vocal knowledge gaps in choir directing, and why they exist * A practical three-part framework for decoding the most common choral directives: * "Open your mouth / drop your jaw" — what the director is after, and how to test it * "Open your throat / create more back space" — the anatomy behind the instruction, and how to find it * "Raise your soft palate" — what that actually means physically, and how to know you've done it * Why singers consistently overdo these adjustments — and what happens when they do * What choir members should expect from their directors, and how to advocate for themselves in the room 👉 Want structured training between rehearsals? Check out Practice Paths at voicescience.org [https://voicescience.org/] 🧠 Topics Covered: * Chorus America 2019 data on choral participation * Why most singers' vocal education comes from choir, not private lessons * Director knowledge gaps: church, school, and theatre contexts * Oral cavity opening — the one-finger test * Pharyngeal anatomy: dimensions, flexibility, and function * Velopharyngeal port, velum, and the "ng" soft palate test * The "Goldilocks position" across all three directives * Why oversized breaths and exaggerated adjustments undermine the goal 🔥 Helpful for: * Choir singers trying to understand what their director is actually asking for * Choir directors looking to be more precise and effective in rehearsal * Voice teachers working with students who have a choral background * Anyone whose primary vocal training has been in an ensemble setting
61 episoder
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