Inhabit your sound and your vibrating body and find a space to recharge your batteries and relax. Free your voice and enjoy the benefits of your own sound with my Voice and Well-being approach.
This approach brings students into contact with their sound through breathing exercises, vocal technique, movements, visualizations, and various musical notions, which will stimulate creativity and help find a source of relaxation and revitalization.
With that in mind, the emphasis is on raising awareness of the vocal process—that is, of the body as a vibrating instrument—rather than on performance-centred aesthetic vocal work.
If you’re a singer, you’ll find this approach offers key elements to add to your vocal routine. If you have no previous vocal experience and you don’t sing, you’ll discover that, beyond the conventions of what we consider “good” or “bad” singing or what we think of as a “beautiful” voice, your own sound has concrete benefits.
Enjoy personalized support to help you discover and develop your voice.
Why sing?
Singing is much more than performing songs or being a good vocalist. For me, singing is a way to assert yourself in the world, not least because our first cry when we come into the world is essentially made of the same breath as singing: when we free our voice we become more aware and more confident. Our voices are a mirror: they let us get closer to each other in an authentic, human way and to reveal our feelings and thoughts more easily and freely. Singing is a central instrument for personal development.
Vocal research is akin to self-knowledge, and my goal is to offer the elements and tools needed to share such an intense and enjoyable experience. It’s important to me that people can find introspection as well as communication—looking within, and being receptive and open to others.
Why deprive yourself of the pleasure and benefits of singing?