Image1

Getting Better at Singing From Home

You want to make it as a singer, but you know the road ahead is long and littered with broken dreams. You’re very aware that you’re starting from the bottom, armed with only a little talent and perhaps a few low-cost teaching tools to support your journey. If you’re serious about improving, finding singing classes near me can help you build the skills and confidence needed to move forward.

Is it possible to get better at singing from home?

Certainly. While the process can be challenging, it’s also an exciting experience that offers many rewards beyond just giving you the chance to one day perform in front of an eager audience.

In this article, we take a look at how you can get better at singing from home.

Practice Every Day

Daily practice is one of the most often taught pieces of advice for getting good at any creative endeavor—to the point where you might feel like if you can’t do it, you might as well not try at all.

THAT isn’t true. What is true is that getting better at singing is an iterative process that benefits from daily effort more than it does from weekend binge sessions.

Imagine two situations. In the first, you practice for thirty minutes a day, five days a week. That’s about two and a half hours total for the week—a schedule that doesn’t do much to chip away at Malcolm Gladwell’s prescriptive 10,000-to-skill mastery recommendation, but respectable nonetheless.

Every day after your practice session, you inevitably spend a little bit of time thinking about what worked and what did not. When you practice on Tuesday, you implement not only what you worked on the day before, but also the little tweaks that came to you in the time between.

Image3

Every day you get a little better, even when you aren’t directly practicing.

On the other hand, let’s say that instead, you practice for four hours every Sunday. That’s more time than you might have put in with an entire week of more gradual practice. But there is a problem—the work that you do at the end of your binge session probably won’t be so different from the concepts you started with at the beginning.

Why? There was no digestive process. You didn’t give yourself the chance to pause for a moment and think about what was working.

Short daily sessions instill the habit of practice while equipping you with a process that is ultimately more productive.

But If You Can’t Practice Daily….

If you can’t practice daily, you should still get it in when you can. The key to improving at anything is to develop a sturdy process for learning the skill and then committing to it as fully as possible. Obviously, practicing often is going to get you to your goal than practicing infrequently would, but picking up a session here or there will be better than nothing.

Remember that even a ten-minute session can be helpful. And if you feel like you can’t manage that take a look at your current routine. Is there any fat that you could trim? Be honest.

Put Yourself Out There

There are a few benefits to performing in front of other people. For one thing, it’s what most singers dream of doing. You might feel tempted to postpone your debut while you develop your talent. Depending on where you are at skill wise that COULD be ok, but most people will do better to just get out there and sing.

Image2

Not only will that help you develop your confidence and comfort level in front of a crowd but it will also give you access to more feedback. It’s hard to get better at anything if you are living in an echo chamber.

Never Get Too High or Too Low

It’s best to approach your singing with as much emotional neutrality as you can. If you’re emotions are swinging all over the place it can be hard to focus on the daily grind. Think about it this way: A grade school teacher needs to go to work every day and do the same thing, regardless of what kind of mood they are in, or how well their class is behaving.

If you want to get good at singing, you do too. Treat it like a job. Learn from losses, think of your wins as an indication that your process is doing what it is supposed to.

Get Lessons

Having professional feedback will help you refine the way you practice. Lessons don’t have to be cripplingly expensive either. You’ll find as you look for instructors that there are lessons available at a wide range of price points.

Invest in yourself through lessons, practice, and above all else, determination. You’ve got this.