Passaggio: a term used in classical singing to describe the pitch ranges in which vocal registration events occur. Beneath passaggio is the chest voice where any singer can produce a powerful sound, and above it lies the head voice, where a powerful and resonant sound is accessible, but usually only through training.
In not so
many words, Passaggio is that space
where your head voice meets your chest voice. The space you don’t want to have
to sing through because it’s awkward as hell. As an untrained singer, I don’t
totally trust my voice to get through it gracefully.

But you know that what awaits you on the other side is going to be amazing... If you can trust yourself enough to navigate the awkward. If you can muster up a little more brave than scared.
I was
pretty self-conscious during my first two voice lessons, despite the easy
nature of my voice teacher, Gayanne. I sang in what I call “little
voice.” The voice that says, “I’m here but maybe don’t look at me, ok? Let me
hug the wall a little longer. Let me keep my coat on a bit before I decide if I
want to stay.”
Little voice is an overwhelming influx of self-judgment, self-doubt, and fear… all wrapped around any part of me that might be useful for singing. It’s a self-fulfilling prophecy of failure.
Outside of singing, I’m not known for having little
voice. True to my name, I’m a lioness, a calculated risk-taker: strong, solid,
fearless – and probably to my detriment at times. This whole little voice thing
is new for me since last year. Some of
it is probably a good thing – tempering my tendency to speak up about anything
remotely unjust or ineffective.
Regardless,
I have been annoyed at my seeming inability to pull out
big voice when most needed. I was dreading the first night of choir when I
would have to sing for Will, the choir director. I was pretty scared that I
wouldn’t be able to muster anything but little voice.
So you
can imagine my surprise when big voice came out for Will. Well, big-ish voice.
Somehow I felt more confident and not at all scared. In fact, I actually
ENJOYED singing!
I spent
the next week way over analyzing the presence and absence of big voice and
little voice. Was it because the space was different? Was it because my first
two voice lessons made me feel more confident? Did hearing my friend, Shana, sing before me make me
feel inspired?
On my way to my third voice lesson, I sang in big voice and little voice,
trying to figure out the difference between the two. As I
turned into Gayanne’s house for my lesson, I realized what it was.
Breath.
Just…
breath. Air. My body doing something it does naturally, without interference
from my brain.
Gayanne
said she was happy to hear me focus on something physical rather than be all up
in my head as I have been. And I
actually enjoyed that voice lesson a lot more, because I stopped getting in my
own way.
----
…Goethe
said, “Until one is committed, there is hesitancy, the chance to draw back,
always ineffectiveness.”
During
one of our earlier voice lessons, Gayanne and I somehow found ourselves
discussing the experience of being in labor. I started thinking about when I hit transition – the most intense stage of labor right before pushing. I
remember how concentrated the contractions were then, and how I was trying to
hold them off by holding my breath as long as possible, almost trying to will
them away.
My
midwife, Claudia, recognized what I was doing and explained very
matter-of-factly, “Listen, the intensity of the contractions is what is going
to get your baby out. Work with your body, not against it. You need to focus
your breath. Push your breath through the contractions.”
In
essence, I needed to commit and I needed to breathe. Until I could commit
myself -- my breath – I was going to stay in labor.
I feel
that way about so many things, but singing especially. Committing my breath, my
life force. Trusting that I’m going to hit the note. Trusting I will weather
the Passaggio gracefully. And even
enjoying the act of singing, rather than critiquing myself every step of the
way!
Rabbi
Josh and I talked last week about the Hebrew song, “Gesher Tzar Me’od.” The translation of the Hebrew lyrics is, “All
the world is a narrow bridge; do not be afraid.” The lyrics were adapted from a
quote by Rabbi Nachman; however, the original words were, “Do not let fear hold
you back.”
The
difference between, “Don’t be scared” and “It’s ok to be scared, but don’t let
it keep you from doing what you need to do” is significant: a recognition that
what is in your head can be there, but that to cross the bridge, it takes
action over thought.
At the
core of any Passaggio, any transition,
is action. Getting out of the fear in my headspace… not just thinking about the
person I want to be or all the reasons holding me back from being that
person… Just taking one step, right now…
committing this next breath unequivocally to DOING, no matter how awkward or
unpleasant it may be.
wow. wow. wow. that's all I can say. thank you for sharing these amazing thoughts...can't wait for more!
ReplyDelete(oh and welcome to the bloggysphere!)
I call my Passagio my "archipelago" because that's what it feels like when I'm forced to sing in that space. I feel like I'm jumping from island to island and never having a place to land. Luckily, I married my producer so he rescores every piece of troublesome music to avoid an island adventure. Too treacherous for my comfort zone. However, sometimes, I just have to dive in and swim. Breathe. Swim. Breath.
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