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There are certain patterns you hear very often in vocal exercises, usually involving the root, third, and fifth of the scale. I use these patterns most often myself, in lessons. But it's good to exercise other intervals and other degrees of the scale too! I found this to be important recently while singing some jazz. I was landing on the wrong note in certain phrases because I was out of training for singing certain intervals quickly. Use any common syllable(s) to exercise with them: mah, ee, nay, meow, bup, ah, muh... the point is to tune your voice exactly to these less commonly used intervals. Each of these scales covers both the male and female range; you should NOT be able to sing every pitch. Stop singing when the exercise is out of your range. ➢ FREE 3 day training for singers: http://bit.ly/3dayfreetrainingbyjacobsvocalacademy Courses: 🔥Our Singing Course ➡️ http://bit.ly/voicemasterycoursecom ➢ Music Theory For Beginners: https://goo.gl/DrwSDN ➢ All Courses: https://jvacourses.teachable.com Follow me on: ➢ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/jacobsvocalacademy/ ➢ Facebook Group: https://goo.gl/97dihY ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/jacobsvocal1 ➢ Instagram: @jacobsvocalacademy Also find my exercises here: ➢ Spotify: https://goo.gl/8FikYx ➢ Apple Music: https://goo.gl/TczNsB ➢ TIDAL: https://goo.gl/fG55Ha ➢ Google Play Music: https://goo.gl/eXDmSp ➢ Amazon: https://goo.gl/bJixpQ Recommended ressources for singers (affiliate links): ➢ 2 Months of free vocal training: https://www.skillshare.com/r/user/jacobsvocalacademy ➢ 14 days of free vocal training: https://www.jacobsvocalacademy.com/30daysinger My ENTIRE Recording Equipment and other recommended things: https://www.amazon.com/shop/jacobsvocalacademyofficial
