Friday, May 18, 2012

Remembering Beatlemania -- the Music and the Energy

What was that incredible Beatlemania energy that blasted through the early 60's? I find it so fascinating to look back at that time when I was 12 years old and the Beatles appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show for the first time. I, like millions of others, was totally swept away by...?? Was it them, was it the music, was something else at play here? When I actually got to see them live at Maple Leaf Gardens the following year (1964) we couldn't even hear their music for all of the screaming and the hysterics, and yet being there, in their presence, was indescribably exciting and awe inspiring. And, as much as we pre-teens and teenagers idolized and revered them, it seems likely that they (John, Paul, George and Ringo) were as blown away by this amazing energy and response as we, their adoring fans were blown away by them. Was it a planetary Kundalini awakening that was being stirred up here? Who knows. Whatever it was, it was exciting and wonderful.

The Gift of The Beatles Music

The Beatles gave us incredible music. For me, being given this music was like a personal gift. When I think back, it seems a little unusual but there really wasn't any music in our house. My parents just didn't play or listen to much music. My main exposure to music and musicians and singers was through the Sunday night ritual of watching the Ed Sullivan Show. From the first note the Beatles played, I had found music!! And it felt like MY MUSIC! Wow! After the Beatles first appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show, all I wanted for Christmas and Birthdays was more Beatles records, more Beatles magazines and books, more Beatles bubble gum (does anyone remember that bubble gum with all the beautiful cards of Beatles photos??) I really wanted to decorate my bedroom with Beatles wallpaper, but my mother drew the line at that. She would only allow me to cover one wall. But no problem, the rest of the walls were covered with Beatles photos anyway!!

To me, Liverpool was this magical place where incredible music was born.

In honour of the Beatles, their music, that magical place in England where it all began, and the music that lives in all of us, I'd love to get together with other people whose lives have been touched by this remarkable group. So for a chance to enjoy some early Beatles music and to hang out with other Beatles fans, check out my flyer below.


                                      ************************************
 Sing and Dance and Reminisce!
 An Evening of Beatles Music and Memories

  
   We will begin our evening with a Sing a Long (or Dance a Long) to some of the early Beatles music. Then we’ll just groove to more of their early music and perhaps have some time to share our own Beatles experiences and memories and explore how the music and the energy of Beatlemania may have influenced our lives.

*If anyone would like to bring a guitar or other instrument to play and/or sing some Beatles songs for us, that would be very welcome.

                             THE CENTERING SPACE
                                    59 Cambridge Ave.
                                      Fri. June 8, 2012
                                      7:15pm—8:45pm
                         Suggested Donation $5.00--$10.00

Hosted by: Barbara SauvĂ©    barbarassong@gmail.com
                                   http://vocalizeandsing.blogspot.com

AND    Josef Koch: Host and DJ    http://www.aquariantimes.ca

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

How Does Your Voice Feel?

Does that seem like a strange question? Actually it makes really good sense to think about the voice and how it is feeling. After all, the voice is simply an extension or an outward expression or reflection of who we are and what we feel. For sure we would be thinking about how our back feels after helping a friend (with heavy furniture) move to a new place. For sure we would be thinking about how our legs and butt feel after going horseback riding for the first time in years!! So why wouldn't we think about how our voice feels?

Reflecting on how the voice feels is actually a wonderful, subtle way to connect the voice with our feelings (topic of previous post). And once the voice is more connected with what we feel in any given moment, it (the voice) will automatically be more connected to the essence of who we are. Our sound, our vocal expression, our singing will be more authentic and much more pleasing and touching to listen to. And the big bonus is, the more deeply connected the voice is to the essence of who we are, the less likely we'll be tempted to push the voice in ways that may damage or traumatize it. This means that the unique qualities that we each have in our voices will be more able to fully emerge.

MY PERSONAL EXPERIENCE OF  CONNECTING  VOICE WITH FEELINGS
 If you have read some of my previous blog posts or attended any of my Chakras and Voice workshops, you will know that my prime interest and passion at the moment is in learning how to care for our voices and how to really listen to their messages and signals. I'm really trying to move away from the idea of "using the voice", "controlling the voice" and instead move more towards the idea of developing a supportive and loving relationship with the voice.

An Important and Profound Vocal Lesson!
And yet even with all of my current developing vocal awareness and my focus on paying attention to the signals of my own voice, I find that my vocal coach still has to remind me to ease up or lighten up, more often than I care to admit!! For all of my focus on being kind to my voice, I still have a tendency to sometimes push a little too hard as I begin a scale or sound. As I began my most recent vocal lesson, my teacher asked me how my voice was. Normally I would answer that question by talking about what I felt I needed to work on,  what I was having challenges with, etc.   This time I answered a little differently. I actually interpreted the question as "How Does Your Voice Feel?". And I simply answered, "My voice doesn't feel very strong today". As soon as I said that, I felt the connection between my voice not feeling very strong and the fact that I didn't feel very strong. I had recently been through a bit of an emotional upset and that had taken a toll on me and on my voice.That may seem simple and obvious enough. However, previously my approach to that kind of situation would have been to feel anxious about whether my voice would hold up through the lesson and that would result in my tendency to push a little too hard in order to compensate or cover up that "not very strong" feeling in both my voice and myself. As soon as I was honest with my teacher about my voice feeling not very strong, the anxiety left and I approached my lesson feeling much more relaxed. Just being honest about not feeling very strong meant I didn't have to try and compensate or try to cover up what I was feeling. And not having to worry any more about whether my voice would hold up, (since my teacher already knew that I wasn't feeling strong) really helped me ease into my lesson in a much more relaxed, connected, authentic way. And you know what happened? By the end of my lesson, my voice was coming from a deeper, stronger and more relaxed place than I had ever previously felt or experienced. It was a beautiful feeling.

And really interesting that during my lesson I felt like I was vocalizing and singing very quietly. It all felt so gentle. Yet when I listened back to the recording of my lesson, my voice sounded full and much stronger than I had thought it was. Whenever I can actually do it, I'm just amazed at the power of being truly authentic and connected.

Here's to AUTHENTICITY! 

And here's to ALL VOICES being honoured and respected and appreciated. 

Barbara

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Re-Connecting the Voice to Feelings and Emotions

For many of us, our voices have become disconnected from the deeper essence of  who we are and what we feel. It is as if our voices and our feelings and emotions have become strangers to each other. And yet, isn't part of vocal function to express emotion and feeling? Laughter certainly involves voice. Crying (unless we have perfected the"silent tears" syndrome!) often involves some vocal expression.  Joy, exuberance, excitement, enthusiasm, sadness, grief, all  show up in our voices -- not just in the words we speak, but in the actual tone and pitch and resonance and volume of the voice. Exuberance, excitement and enthusiasm are often reflected in a higher pitched, more energetic and faster moving voice. Sadness or depression may create a sense and sound of heaviness or slowness or even flatness in the voice. Anger often raises the volume and ability to project the voice. It might also result in a more constricted or pinched voice if we try to contain it.  Fear may constrict the voice altogether or it may result in a tremulous, shaky sounding voice.


So many emotions -- and every one creates a different vibration or resonance in the voice. Every emotion has its own unique vocal sound. Vocal expression of emotions is like a rich and fascinating and beautiful tapestry of sound and vibration and pitch and resonance.

Let the Children Sing!
 Except -- many of us have been consistently taught and trained to "put on a happy face" and speak nicely even if our hearts are breaking or our gut is tied up in a rage. Or imagine children that naturally get excited and exuberant and their voices reflect that excitement -- good chance they are made to tone down or, even worse, to shut up. I love hearing the sound of exuberant children, whether I'm on the subway, or I hear it in the hallway of my apartment building. I am also really saddened every time I hear parents shushing their naturally exuberant children in fear of other people getting upset or annoyed.

There are many ways that our voices get disconnected or even shut down from the essence of who we are and what we feel. The voice then becomes something we "control" or "use". But what about that precious authentic voice that was simply part of our total being as infants? As babies, feeling and expressing vocally were pretty much one and the same -- so connected were they. Of course as we grow and learn to speak, we refine that vocal ability so that we can express our needs and wants and emotions through words or maybe even through songs or other kinds of vocalizing and sounding. And if we were raised in a way that our needs, wants and emotions were respected and our vocal expression of them honoured and accepted, then good chance our voices will remain connected to the essence of who we are and what we feel.  And for those of us who were shut down or silenced vocally, the good news is, it is never too late to begin that exciting exploration of re-connecting the voice to feelings and emotions.



Connecting the Voice with the Seven Major Chakras


My recent workshop of the same title has got me thinking about this issue. The question I have been reflecting upon is "How do we stop using and controlling the voice, and instead allow it to re-connect with the deepest part of our being and allow it to simply flow from there?"

Originally I thought about "using" the voice to energize the Seven Major Chakras -- which is often the way working with Chakras and Voice is approached. For example, in Eastern traditions, there are certain Sanskrit Sounds that are used to sound the Chakras. There are specific vowel sounds that definitely help to activate the Chakras. All of these sounds and tones and vowels certainly are powerful ways to connect with the Chakras.

The question that comes to my mind, as someone who has had a lot of (previous, but now healing!) vocal issues and vocal weaknesses, is -- what if the voice isn't ready or able to project those specific sounds of the Chakras? Or what if our emotional self is not ready or able to handle the "out there" projection of the voice?

 In my experience and in my new awareness of  respecting the voice, (see my previous blog post) that old way of "using" the voice does not always result in a natural flow that is kind and respectful to the voice and the vocal cords, and it may result in vocal strain. It may also result in a feeling of traumatizing the voice or the part of us that may have deep rooted fears or insecurities about allowing our voices to be free and expressive.

For example, the 3rd Chakra, the Solar Plexus, our Personal Power Center, (located above the navel and connected to the digestive organs) is a place where old unresolved or unexpressed anger is often stored. In connecting deeply with the Solar Plexus, we may begin to re-experience those old angry feelings. It may seem like vocalizing those feelings through vigorous sounding or even by blasting out some angry songs would be very cathartic. And it may be if the voice is really strong and able to handle those sounds, and if, emotionally we are ready to be so totally "out there" vocally. But I suspect in many cases (and I certainly speak from personal experience!) that kind of catharsis can be pretty hard on the voice and traumatizing to the emotional body.  It is too much too fast and it does not allow for a natural flow of energetic connection to develop between the Solar Plexus and the Voice.

In my experience and way of thinking about this, I believe we first need to begin developing a relationship between the Voice and the Solar Plexus (or whatever Chakra and/or emotions we are dealing with) and find the middle ground where the voice is allowed to create those sounds that feel good to it. And the feelings in the Solar Plexus are gently freed in a way that is comfortable and nourishing to the whole system (including the voice). Some very interesting sounds or songs could result from that connected place.

My next blog post will explore the idea of developing a relationship with the Voice and understanding its signals and messages.

In the meantime,

Love Your Voice!

                              Barbara