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A Perfect Summer Voice Spa:
Vocal Process Core Training

These two Voice Styles Intensive courses were created specially for the Rimon Academy of Jazz and Contemporary Music using information from our foundation course, Core Training.

Professor Rena Cook

Each two-day course introduced the moveable structures of the vocal tract and explored several basic vocal sets. All the participants had the chance to experiment within the group, and either performed or observed the Masterclasses that followed each days teaching.
Professor Rena Cook

Picture this: a sunny summer day in the Thames Valley village of Hitchen, an expansive lawn beside a sprawling country manor. Add to this idyllic scene the words “retraction,” “vocal fold plane” and “thyroid tilt” wafting through the air. An odd combination you say? Not to this theatre voice trainer.What was called a voice intensive was more like a Voice Spa!

Let me clarify – I am an American in love with all things British and I am a voice nerd (translated: one who never tires of talking, contemplating, and learning about the human voice). The Vocal Process Core Training provided an opportunity to feed both these passions.

Lead by Vocal Process founders Gillyanne Kayes and Jeremy Fisher, this three-day intensive provided an in-depth look at the foundational tenets of a voice training technique that continues to be a corner stone of my teaching practice. Based on sound science, research, and accurate anatomy, Vocal Process looks at vocal production, dissects its functions into teachable skills and reorganizes it again into a voice that is greater than the sum of its parts.

Before I share the details of this rich and varied experience, let me clarify what led me to this work. While I was attending the Central School of Speech and Drama, Gillyanne did a one off workshop that left me hungry for more Vocal Process. I took some private lessons from her and began to see that her approach would be extremely beneficial to actor training. I have endeavored to incorporate many of the exercises, or figures, into my work with students and young actors. I have used her book 'Singing and the Actor' as a text in several courses I have taught. But it was not until I did the Core Training with Gillyanne and Jeremy that I had a deep enough handle on the information and techniques to assimilate the work into the heart of my teaching.

The location for the Core Training was the pastoral environment of the Benslow Music Trust in Hitchen. Accommodations on site, tasty meals, hot tea with cakes and fruit all provided an ideal backdrop for concentrated study. The energized group of thirty participants came together from diverse backgrounds, including young performers, barbershop singers, choral conductors, and experienced voice trainers, with two of us making the journey from the US. This cross section of interests and range of experience is a testament to the wide application of Vocal Process.

A further tribute to Gillyanne and Jeremy, the course was professionally organized and presented, each hour carefully planned to enhance information, practical application, complete with tea breaks for reflection. In a clear effort to teach to diverse learning modalities, Jeremy shared a design for a paper model of the larynx, which each of us built and referred to throughout the sessions. The handouts and overheads were concise and supported the presented information. Jeremy’s computerized sound analysis demonstration was excellent, even for the few of us who are hopeless techno-phobes.

The facilitators, Gill Main, Mathew Reeve, and Julie McLean provided knowledgeable and comfortable support. Each brought an individuality to the process that kept energy circulating during the small group sessions.

The highlights of the material included an in-depth look at how the voice works; a clear explanation and demonstration of the moving parts of the voice and how they alter sound qualities; and four vocal set ups which lead to direct and immediate control of quality as it relates to style. Each day concluded with a master class, led by Gillyanne and Jeremy with Jeremy at the piano. The facilitators shared insight when appropriate. The techniques presented in all the sessions were accessible, immediately tangible and offered a deeper understanding of solid, healthy vocal technique both for singing and for speaking.

Which leads me to the core of my thoughts about Vocal Process, I find this approach thoroughly compatible with and supportive of mainstream vocal training techniques. It provides a missing link in some training models. On a daily basis I find the work with nasal port, retraction of the false folds, the concept of twang as a useful tool in projection, easy glottal onset, and monitoring effort levels to be not only helpful but also crucial. When taught in conjunction with Linklater and/or Rodenburg based approaches, Vocal Process creates a total training method for the actor or professional voice user.

How many people can actually say “I spent my summer vacation at a Voice Spa?” For this voice nerd, anglophile and dedicated voice trainer, I could not have fashioned a more rejuvenating way to spend a holiday.


 

 
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