[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
RE: [HAPS-L] Your voice when you have a cold
I've always wondered about that, too, but for a different reason.
Exactly how large ARE the various sinuses anyhow? Can they really
function as resonating chambers?
<Insert image of large clock running in reverse.>
Back in the 1950s and '60s, the dear Sisters would whack us choirboys
with a yardstick if we didn't sing with our diaphragm. All the
resonance was to come from our chest. Think Jim Nabors: the "Gomer
Pyle" speaking voice was his real speaking voice. He wasn't trying to
be a nasal tenor; he WAS really nasal. Yet when he sang, he had this
rich, round baritone.
No answers, just questions.
Steve Noe, in Indianapolis
"We are not 'Passengers on Spaceship Earth,' we are crew, and it's time
we took our duties seriously."
><><><><><><><><><><><>
J. Stephen Noe
Human Anatomy and Physiology
Rm. F309 Fairbanks Building, Lawrence Campus
snoe@xxxxxxxxxxx
(317)92104376
Ivy Tech Community College-Central Indiana
50 West Fall Creek Pkwy North Dr.
Indianapolis, IN 46208-5752
=========================================To manage subscription,send email from the
subscription address to
imailsrv@xxxxxxxxxxx and in MESSAGE (1)
To unsubscribe from HAPS-L,
put : unsubscribe HAPS-L,
(2)To subscribe from a different address,
put : subscribe HAPS-L your_full_name
=======================================