Deon Unthank

Advice on practicing

There is a thread on the Message Boards about practicing with ear monitors and sound systems. I want to talk about this in a little more detail than I could on the Message Boards. There are several areas that practicing effects, so it's not just a time of singing your songs together. It effects how you hear each other, how you hear yourself with the group, and how you hear yourself and the group with the music, be it live or track.

First, let me say that the attitude in which we approach practice effects our attitude on stage. Now don't get me wrong, I believe in having fun at practice, but it can't be all cutting up and having fun. At the same time, practice shouldn't be all work and a drudgery to go to. Practice sets the stage for how your group will perform in every area of your existence. Practice is to be a relaxed place where everyone is free to learn. When you quit learning, it's time to quit. Practice is where you learn not only new songs, but new styles, new techniques. Practice is where you hone the talents that you have and learn to enhance them. Practice, not on the stage is where you experiment.

As I said in my post on the Message Boards, I don't like to practice with a Sound System. I don't really care what you use for monitors (well I do, but that's another topic altogether) when you are on stage singing, but at practice you need to hear the natural voice of everyone around you. Let's remember what Sound Systems are for. The were not designed or purposed for singing in a small room. Sound systems were designed so that many people in large rooms and auditoriums could hear singers from a far away distance. When a sound system is used for it's designed purpose, it is a wonderful thing, but a small read where people are practicing is NOT what it was designed for. So, why not use a sound system for practicing? First when practicing without amplification, you must listen closer to hear each individual. This makes you pay much closer to the detail of what you are doing. It also makes for a much more intimate setting. When you have to be close enough to each other to smell each others breath, you have to let your defenses down and relationships being to happen. When you are standing close to each other practicing, you begin to notice the little movement in each others voices and you begin to follow them causing a brilliant blend that is not accomplished standing ten feet away form each other using a sound system. There is a carry-over of this intamacy from the practice room to the stage, and the audience will see it and hear it. Get rid of that sound system at practice, you'll never regret it.

I've got more to say, but I'll save it for another time.
Posted on Aug 22, 2008 - 12:10 PM | [1] Comments | | Permalink

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Comments

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I agree with you totally! Most groups could greatly improve their overall sound and timing if they simply paid attention to one another just a bit more. However, if you do want to practice with a sound system, try the four corners approach once you "think" you are ready to stage a song...grab your mic and each person face a different corner of the room. You then MUST rely on what you know, what you hear and what you feel in the song. Try it, it works!


Commented by Loretta Lewallen On 09/17/2008
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