Saturday, 20 June 2015

How singers protect their voices

How do singers protect their voices?

  • 20 June 2015
  • From the section Magazine
Professional singers treat their voices a bit like athletes treat their bodies, writes singer and broadcaster Mary King.
The best protection is a good posture and sound vocal technique. Voices always need to be supported by the bigger muscles in the body - poor posture can lead to muscular tension and vocal strain. There are also other factors which might be less obvious.
Singers need to keep their bodies hydrated, so that the delicate vocal folds (or cords) can be kept supple. They would probably drink between two and three litres of water spread out throughout the day. The water would be at room temperature, rather than ice-cold.
A number of factors contribute to dryness, so singers avoid caffeine, red wine and, wherever possible, air-conditioning. Smoke, of course, in whatever form, is a really bad idea.
Hydration in the form of steam (head over a bowl of boiling water, with a towel over your head), is seen by many singers as the very best way to get the folds hydrated, and to shift thick mucus which might clog them up. Menthol products are too strong for the delicate membranes, so singers choose to keep it pure.
A singer's lifestyle is very different from the average person - they need to have enough energy for a performance, but not eat so much that they fall asleep. Eating late at night, however - after a performance, for example - can produce problems with acid reflux.
This condition causes stomach acids to rise up the oesophagus during sleep, backing up against the vocal folds, causing discomfort, and eventually, damage. For this reason also, singers tend to avoid spicy or acidic foods - eg apples or tomatoes - and fizzy drinks, and often sleep with the bedhead raised.
Singers will regularly spend some time on "vocal rest" - total silence, with no speaking for a period of 48 hours, giving their vocal apparatus time to recover. The rule with sore throats, and particularly laryngitis, is no speaking and no whispering - the very worst thing that you can do in this situation.
Singers can be compared to sportsmen and women - they are the athletes of the voice.
Sunday Feature: An Anatomy of Singing broadcasts on BBC Radio 3 at 18:45 BST on Sunday 21 June as part of the Classical Voice Season and will be available to catch up on iPlayer for 30 days. Radio 3 is resident at the Royal Welsh College of Music Drama from 19-21 June.
Subscribe to the BBC News Magazine's email newsletter to get articles sent to your inbox.

china news

China arrests after hundreds attack police in Hunan province

  • 20 June 2015
  • From the section China
Police in central China have arrested 13 people after hundreds of villagers attacked a police station on Friday.
Residents of the village, in Hunan province, were reportedly angry about the handling of a young woman's death last month.
Officials say the death was caused by pesticide poisoning, but relatives have accused her husband of involvement.
Her relatives beat the husband and took local officials hostage when they attempted to intervene.
In a statement reported by state media, the police said that the trouble began on Thursday after the family displayed the woman's corpse in her mother-in-law's house.
When police attempted to defuse the situation they were attacked and forced to kneel before the deceased woman, the statement adds.
Hundreds of villagers joined the bereaved relatives the next day to protest and attack the local police station.
The police say that hundreds of officers were called in to restore order.

China

Saturday, 13 June 2015

EGYPT REOPENS RAFAH BORDER

Egypt reopens border crossing with Gaza for three days

   
 


Egypt reopened Saturday the blocked Rafah border crossing with the Gaza Strip for three days in both directions for the first time in three months, which is considered as a sign of improvement between Egypt and the Islamic Hamas movement.
Since the ouster of Egyptian Islamist President Mohamed Morsi in July 2013, the Egyptian government has kept the crossing largely closed, while occasionally reopening it partly for humanitarian cases.
Cairo accused the Gaza-ruling Hamas group, an offshoot of the outlawed Muslim Brother organization, of interfering in Egypt’s internal affairs and aiding militants targeting the Egyptian army in Sinai.
Meanwhile, the Crossings and Borders Corporation of the Interior Ministry of Hamas, which rules the coastal enclave, confirmed the opening of the crossing, saying that only patients, holders of foreign passports, students and some Palestinians with visas can cross the Gaza Strip into Egypt.
Maher Abu Sabha, director of the crossing on the Palestinian side, told reporters that up to 14,000 Gazans have applied to exit through Rafah, noting that, however, only 400 people can leave Gaza each day.
Last month, the Egyptian government reopened Rafah crossing for two days in one way to enable stranded Palestinians in Egypt to enter the coastal enclave.
The terminal is the only window to some 1.8 million Palestinians in Gaza to the outside world, except two other crossings with Israel which are subject to strict restrictions since Hamas’ violent takeover of the seaside territory in 2007.
Relations between Hamas and the new military-backed government of Egypt worsened to unprecedented levels after Hamas opposed the ouster of Morsi, a Hamas patron, in July 2013 following nationwide protests against his one-year rule.
However, an Egyptian appeal court canceled earlier this month a previous verdict labeling Hamas as a terror organization.