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0808 – The Causes of Vocal Tension

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Manage episode 358327454 series 2964576
Content provided by Peter Stewart. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Peter Stewart or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

2023.03.19 – 0808 – The Causes of Vocal Tension


What Causes Tension

Nerves. Overwhelm. Anxiety. Excitement. The unknown. Panic. Being underprepared. Being worried about how you sound. Concerns about your message and the audience’s reception to it.


Any physical niggle can affect your voice. That’s anything from a paper cut to menstrual cramps, discomfort anywhere will cause ‘compensatory muscular tension’ and so mental distraction. Even if just a small part of your brain is dealing with the pain, possibly even if you are trying to block it out, it will affect your voice performance. The solution is obvious: deal with the source of the pain.

Physical tension can be a direct cause of you sounding different: text neck, baby carrying, shopping, pushing and driving can all cause muscular strains or stasis that will affect your breath – the very foundation of how you sound.


Tension pain may be treated with medication, which itself can cause a change in your voice: overly relaxing you, causing drowsiness or a lack of mucus. And a lack of mucus in your throat and mouth can lead to hoarseness and possible polyps


Tension can cause tiredness, both fatigue in your vocal instrumentation, but also in the rest of your ‘self’. Tiredness will affect your voice


Pain can cause you to be irritable or depressed, itself leading to stress and the possible use of medication… and so the spiral continues.



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  continue reading

1002 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 358327454 series 2964576
Content provided by Peter Stewart. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Peter Stewart or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

2023.03.19 – 0808 – The Causes of Vocal Tension


What Causes Tension

Nerves. Overwhelm. Anxiety. Excitement. The unknown. Panic. Being underprepared. Being worried about how you sound. Concerns about your message and the audience’s reception to it.


Any physical niggle can affect your voice. That’s anything from a paper cut to menstrual cramps, discomfort anywhere will cause ‘compensatory muscular tension’ and so mental distraction. Even if just a small part of your brain is dealing with the pain, possibly even if you are trying to block it out, it will affect your voice performance. The solution is obvious: deal with the source of the pain.

Physical tension can be a direct cause of you sounding different: text neck, baby carrying, shopping, pushing and driving can all cause muscular strains or stasis that will affect your breath – the very foundation of how you sound.


Tension pain may be treated with medication, which itself can cause a change in your voice: overly relaxing you, causing drowsiness or a lack of mucus. And a lack of mucus in your throat and mouth can lead to hoarseness and possible polyps


Tension can cause tiredness, both fatigue in your vocal instrumentation, but also in the rest of your ‘self’. Tiredness will affect your voice


Pain can cause you to be irritable or depressed, itself leading to stress and the possible use of medication… and so the spiral continues.



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  continue reading

1002 episodes

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