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Yo how the fuck is that possible
Aw hell I can do thatShe's singing one note and whistling the other.
Its basically just making that weird ufo hum/whistle sound. Just with good pitch control and awareness.Ok, sir.
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Im pretty sure that's not what she's doing.She's singing one note and whistling the other.
Im pretty sure that's not what she's doing.
Its basically just making that weird ufo hum/whistle sound. Just with good pitch control and awareness.
If I could have seen behind that pop filter I wouldn't have even asked.
The voice is not strictly a monophonic instrument. It's just that the other tones are nearly inaudible.Well I'm absolutely sure. The voice is a monophonic instrument. The only way for the voice to produce multiple tones is through the use of overtones/harmonics, but it wouldn't sound like what she's doing.
I actually know both Lalah and her sister Donnita and could call either one to confirm right now if I wanted. But without doing all that, trust me, it's just whistling and singing simultaneously.
I am glad I don’t know her. She could sing my little pay check away from me. I have always loved her voice since her first single, “Baby, don’t cry”.
Absolutely!She's fine too.
The voice is not strictly a monophonic instrument. It's just that the other tones are nearly inaudible.
With all due deference and respect to what you've shared, I'm still not convinced that it's whistling. I am absolutely convinced that what she is doing is what you mentioned above in bold - harmonic overtones aka throat singing, a technique mastered in several countries internationally going back to antiquity. I would imagine that if you did consult Lalah, she would tell you the same.
.......
James Kuczero, Professional music teacher for over 3 decades and counting
Answered Jan 8
How is Lalah Hathaway singing three-note chords by herself in this video?
She’s only producing two tones, not a true chord, using a technique called polyphonic overtone singing. Almost all sounds produced by a voice or most all instruments contain more than one sound, but the overtones are so soft you can’t really hear them. Overtones are the reason you can tell your mom’s voice from some other woman’s voice, or partly why a trumpet playing low and a trombone playing high don’t sound the same. You recognize the unique combinations of fundamental and overtones (plus the resonance produced by the mouth and sinus chambers.
In the video, she is splitting the tone she is singing using the back edge of her tongue, then emphasizing one of the other overtones on top of the fundamental tone.
Here are a few videos which demonstrate the technique. The sounds are purer in these videos, making it easier to hear. Of course, these folks aren’t scatting around their demonstrations like Lalah, so her level of difficulty is harder, even if her tones aren’t as clean.
https://www.quora.com/How-is-Lalah-Hathaway-singing-three-note-chords-by-herself-in-this-video
The voice is not strictly a monophonic instrument. It's just that the other tones are nearly inaudible.
With all due deference and respect to what you've shared, I'm still not convinced that it's whistling. I am absolutely convinced that what she is doing is what you mentioned above in bold - harmonic overtones aka throat singing, a technique mastered in several countries internationally going back to antiquity. I would imagine that if you did consult Lalah, she would tell you the same.
.......
James Kuczero, Professional music teacher for over 3 decades and counting
Answered Jan 8
How is Lalah Hathaway singing three-note chords by herself in this video?
She’s only producing two tones, not a true chord, using a technique called polyphonic overtone singing. Almost all sounds produced by a voice or most all instruments contain more than one sound, but the overtones are so soft you can’t really hear them. Overtones are the reason you can tell your mom’s voice from some other woman’s voice, or partly why a trumpet playing low and a trombone playing high don’t sound the same. You recognize the unique combinations of fundamental and overtones (plus the resonance produced by the mouth and sinus chambers.
In the video, she is splitting the tone she is singing using the back edge of her tongue, then emphasizing one of the other overtones on top of the fundamental tone.
Here are a few videos which demonstrate the technique. The sounds are purer in these videos, making it easier to hear. Of course, these folks aren’t scatting around their demonstrations like Lalah, so her level of difficulty is harder, even if her tones aren’t as clean.
https://www.quora.com/How-is-Lalah-Hathaway-singing-three-note-chords-by-herself-in-this-video
Honestly impressive. I could tell you had a music background.Bruh, she's whistling. Respect here too, but it's not polyphonic overtones. It's whistling, and she was singing a two note chord, not three notes.
Do you know the overtones series?
Fundamental, octave, fifth, 2nd octave, M3, Fifth, 3rd octave, M2, etc?
The examples in your videos were emphasizing certain overtones along with the fundamental, which are an octave + apart. She is singing close intervals. It's just whistling bruh.
I have two degrees in music btw.
Wow! I know our ancestors had to have mastered this shit here. Now mantras and the 'Aum' sound make even more sense.