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What is a session singer? part II
(page 1)

This is the continuation of Jeremy's interview with renowned session
singer Kim Chandler on the ten points you need to be a good session
singer. [You can click here to
read part I of What is a session singer? containing the first five
points]
The last five points
Kim: Point number six. Do you blend tightly with
other singers and with yourself if you’re multi-tracking? This is in
terms of the phrasing, the diction, the general tone quality that
you’ve used. You have to match all that as well as the pitching and
the timing.
Point number seven. Are you stylistically versatile?
So I was talking before about being employable. If you specialise in
just one style, you’d better hope there’s a LOT of work in that one
style, because otherwise you’re just not going to get enough work to
pay the bills. It’s actually beneficial that I’ve got quite a
generic commercial sound (which is why I think I personally have
gone the session singer path rather than the artist path). And
that’s actually what you need as a session singer – not a really
distinctive, signature ‘artist’ sound. The minute you’ve got that
you’re too classifiable, you’re too obvious…
Jeremy: Too distinctive…
Kim: And that can become a problem. That person should be an
artist. Whereas for me, my natural sound is quite generic and I’m
also a bit chameleon-like so I’m naturally pre-disposed to these
skills.
Point number eight. Do you have a reliable vocal
technique that gives you a high level of control and consistency?
Are you able to sing for hours on end (if need be) without losing
your voice? For example, doing backing vocals on an album in one
day, which I’ve had to do many times.
Point number nine. Do you have infinite amounts of
patience?
Jeremy: Do you?
Kim: I don’t actually! I don’t suffer fools gladly. But I
have infinite amounts of patience in certain circumstances, like in
my job, where you just have to. For example, working with producers
who aren’t singers and who don’t know exactly what they’re after, or
give you very odd or vague instructions. Or with sessions that have
run way over time. The singers have been booked at a certain time
and the instrumentalists putting the track down (because the singers
are always the last thing to go on of course) could be hours late
and you’ve still got to go into that session with a good attitude.
Even though you’re hungry, you’re tired, you’re irritable, your
blood sugar’s low, you still have to walk in there and be absolutely
vibey on every single take even though you may feel like strangling
somebody at that point. And you may have PMT, etc etc. It doesn’t
matter. No-one cares about any of those things. You are paid to
deliver and deliver you will. Because if don’t deliver, it will
potentially be your last session with that person. Not only could it
be the last session with that particular producer, but with any
other singers you’re singing with who then talk about you to other
people. That’s it, that is the network – it can work for or against
you.
Point number ten. Are you able to generate
performance-level vibe in a completely dead room with no audience,
take after take after take. Many singers find this difficult and
need an audience to get them going.
Jeremy: I think that’s a really important one, because being
in the recording studio is so different from anything else.
Kim: Completely. It’s very unnatural. It’s an incredibly
unnatural environment.
Jeremy: Yet the output has to sound like it’s the best thing
you ever want to do.
Kim: Otherwise it will not sell (if it’s advertising) or it
won’t work (if it’s a song). Even if you sing it beautifully in
tune, beautifully in time, you’ve got all the lyrics right, got all
the little embellishments and things that you do down pat, if you
don’t sound like you’re ‘present’, if you don’t sound like you’re
into it, it will not work. The songwriter that you’re working for
won’t be able to put their finger on it, but they’ll know
something’s missing. If it’s an advertising jingle, and you might be
singing about dog biscuits or tampons, or sexually transmitted
diseases as I had to do recently…
Jeremy: What, where you can buy them?
Kim: No, it was a sexual health helpline jingle. Again, you
have to sound very engaged and involved with it otherwise it’s not
going to do the job it’s meant to do, the job you’re being paid to
do. You have to somehow (and this is the acting side of it), you
have to somehow find or access something inside you that you have to
get into the vibe of whatever you’re being asked to do. Whether it’s
a song or a film or a jingle or whatever. It doesn’t matter what
you’re being asked to do, you have to find ‘that’ place. Otherwise
it literally will not sell or will not work. And that’s not easy to
do when it might be some dreadful piece of music you’re being asked
to do. Nonetheless the ‘good’ and the ‘bad’ pay the same amount of
money.
Jingles
Jeremy: This whole area I’m really fascinated in because
it’s something I know nothing about. The jingle.
Kim: Yes, well it’s my speciality. I’ve literally sung
thousands, even before I’d left Australia, because I was one of the
main jingle session singers in Australia. That’s actually how I got
into session work. My very first session was either ‘87 or ‘88, and
I can still remember it. It was a jingle for a bacon company in
Australia [KR Darling Downs]. And that jingle for all I know is
probably still on air. I took to it like a duck to water. I went
“Ah! I really like this”. It was one of those epiphany moments. I
thought “I really dig this”. It’s a very odd thing, session singing,
which is what I try to explain to people. It’s not glamorous! I
don’t know what people outside of it think it is, because I’ve been
in it too long. I know what it is, so I find it really difficult to
picture what other people think it is. What I try to tell other
singers is that it’s a weird headspace that you’ve got to be in to
love session singing. Because of the level of scrutiny involved, and
the perfectionism involved, and the working conditions sometimes. So
you really have to be wired that way for it to suit you. I’m glad
for the future of the music industry that most people DON’T want to
do it. That most people do want to make a creative, unique
contribution to the world as artists and use us session singers to
enhance that.
Click here to read
page 2
Part of this interview originally appeared in the Vocal Process
eZINE.
Remember to
register for the Vocal Process eZINE to stay up to date.
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Giving the student broader knowledge about the structures of the
larynx can be effective on many levels of their training and
understanding. The 'moveable larynx' has long been the starting
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