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December 5th, 2009:

Rock Music

Just like all other genres, there is significant method and tricks to singing rock music. Not amazingly, when learning how to sing rock, the basics remain the same as they are when you learn to sing opera, classical, and so on. As you get more advanced, you can then start to adapt your method to your kind of choice, in this case, rock music. As you read through my How to Sing Rock Music hub, you’ll learn regarding how to warm up and warm down correctly, breathing techniques to develop your quality and volume, improving your range, shattering without hurting your throat, how to place gravel in your vocals, and a lot of other tips and tricks to help you study how to sing rock.

Also, it’s nearly not possible to learn how to sing rock music by just reading about it, you really need examples that you can see and listen to and follow, so as we move through the whole thing you need to know to learn how to sing rock music properly, there will be videos at every stage. The set of videos you see here were made by Muzzzicman and are also accessible on YouTube. He’s done an amazing job of giving demonstrations so that you can put his how to sing rock methods into practice.

Hit Music in the 60′s

Top Music Hits of the 60′s was simply the most familiar and downloaded segment of music in modern times. When the decade of the 50′s came to a close there was a big change in famous music. Some of the “Doo Wop” tunes continued, however we began to see more female groups. Some of them such as the Ronettes used Phil Spector’s unique “Wall of Sound” in the recording studio. Surf music strike the airwaves, Chubby Checkers taught us how to do the twist and Elvis was still riding high, however he saw some large competition when the Beatles came to the United States and the British Invasion start. The Early 60′s had some colorful songs such as Alley Oop (from the weekly comic strip), and memorable tunes such as Cathy’s Clown by the Everly Brothers and Georgia On My Mind by a young Ray Charles. The classic British Invasion period was 1964 to 1967 (roughly bracketed by The Beatles’ form on Ed Sullivan and the appearance of Jimi Hendrix as a U.S.-born superstar who had his first success in the UK), however the term has also been applied to later waves of UK artists that had important impact on the North American entertainment market.