Singing with your stomach is a much better way to be heard and to make your voice carry. Diaphragmatic breathing can expel the air stored up and create a better sound. This will allow you to sing more loudly. The more air you have in your lungs, the louder the sound will be.
Misconception #1: You should breathe into your belly.
If you try to “breathe into your belly,” what you end up doing is forcefully distending your abdominal muscles out on the inhale—which may redirect the energy out of your shoulders—but does absolutely nothing to help you find an optimum breath for singing.
Singing from the stomach/diaphragm means using proper air support, and leaving your throat/jaw/tongue out of the equation. But you're not really singing from your diaphragm.
While breathing a shallow breath from your throat will work in most speaking cases and some short sung phrases, singers want to make a habit of breathing in with their diaphragm (full chest) in order to get a good amount of air for their sung phrases.
The short answer: To monitor our breathing and support.
The name of the game is diaphragmatic breathing.
This method of breathing deep into your belly is the most effective and healthy way to chamber the air necessary for supporting singing, while leaving your shoulders, neck, and jaw out of the equation, thus relieving tension.
Overweight singers have to use more musculature to get their chests to expand while they sing. If you lose weight, your core muscles need to be conditioned properly to remain strong despite not being used so much. Losing too much weight can have the opposite effect on your voice.
When the stomach is too full, it is difficult to take the low breaths necessary for healthy singing. Also, singing tends to cause burping when it is done too soon after eating, and burping is an activity that is usually frowned upon by many audience members during a vocal performance.
One holds that a large amount of fatty tissue surrounding the voice box (larynx) increases its resonance capability and thus produces a more pleasing sound. The amount of this fatty tissue varies from singer to singer.
They stick their finger in their ear or push the ear lobe closed so they can hear themselves inside their head. This is often done when there is a lot of ambient noise or the harmony part they are singing is intricate and requires a lot of focus to sing it properly (in tune).
This practice is considered to be one of the easiest ways to burn fat, and tighten your tummy muscles. Plus, there is no age bar. Yes, anyone and everyone can do it! Basically, when you suck your stomach in and hold that position, the transverse muscles in your abdominal area get activated.
The best way to deal with phlegm is with light vocalizing. This will keep your voice supple and flexible and cause the phlegm to vibrate off. Practice singing at a low volume on EE vowel scales and glissando's (start from you highest pitch and slide down to your lowest pitch).
If your note is flat, you will need to bring your voice slightly higher. Easy does it here. Most likely, you're already quite close to the pitch you need to sing. However, if you notice that your note is a bit “under pitch” or flat, then gently sing higher until you feel your voice match the note.
Teeth and Jaw
Having a relaxed jaw is important while singing to prevent strain on the vocal chords. It's easy to allow tension to set in while singing, especially when trying to reach higher and lower notes. Having a free and fluid jaw involves relaxing it at the hinges and allowing it to open softly.
Singing enhances lung function
We often take our lungs for granted, but most of us rarely use them to their full capacity. The way singing requires you to breathe makes you do just that, increasing your lung capacity as well as engaging the muscles around the ribcage.
While characteristic dizziness during a voice lesson could be associated with hyper-oxygenation, it is possible dizziness is caused by changes in blood pressure created when singing. “Dizziness is your body's way of telling you that something isn't right.
The Lip Roll Exercise Many singers utilize the lip roll exercise during their warm ups to build vocal skills. The objective of this exercises is to stretch out the vocal folds, warm up the muscles of the pharynx and oral cavity, as well as the cheeks, lips and respiratory system (the airflow).
If the other sounds can't be reduced, singers need to separate their voice from them. This is done by singing into the mic as closely as possible in order to be loud enough so your voice isn't drowned out. Placing their lips this way reduces distortion.
Many amateur singers or students of singing raise their head whenever they move from low notes to progressively higher notes. The rationale is that as the notes get higher, the student or singer feels that they need to raise their head in order to visualize the higher notes and to be able to sing higher!