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Singing requires quiet, passive breathing. Watch this video to understand why active breathing is wrong and singers should only breathe using the diaphragm. Please check out my other vocal videos and feel free to suggest topics for new videos. Thanks Why You Need To Sing From The Diaphragm ... • Why You Need To Sing From The Diaphragm - ... What Is The Diaphragm? ... • What Is The Diaphragm? How Does It Work? How To Strengthen The Diaphragm ... • How To Strengthen The Diaphragm - The Simp... Why You Need To Strengthen The Diaphragm ... • Why You Need To Strengthen The Diaphragm -... Understanding Vocal Technique ... • Understanding Vocal Technique - Cutting Th... What is Vibrato? ... • What Is Vibrato? Why Does Vibrato Happen? Why shouldn’t you sing with active breathing? There are 2 types of breathing: passive breathing and active breathing. Passive breathing, or quiet breathing, is when you breathe with only the diaphragm engaged and no other muscle. Active breathing is when other voluntary core muscles engage to help you breathe. This is a good question because on its face, it sounds like a great idea. You want to breathe the best you can, so use all the muscles you’ve got. Even the word “active” sounds great. Singing is a very physical activity: so of course, it’s “active.” In reality, active breathing is bad for singing and bad for your performance. The term ‘active’ refers to the fact that these additional muscles are voluntary muscles which can be actively controlled. And it’s ‘active’ because it automatically occurs during strenuous, physical activity. Again, I know you’re thinking “Hey Mike, this still doesn’t sound like a bad thing. You want singing to be active and powerful.” First, the voluntary muscles that engage during active breathing are your core muscles. Their primary function is to support your skeleton and keep it erect. Core muscles contract up and in like a corset or a pair of spanks. During active breathing they perform what’s called “forced expiration.” They act to push air out of the lungs and force you to exhale. That’s because they’re trying to prevent light-headedness during strenuous activity. You get light-headed, not from a lack of oxygen, but by an excess of carbon dioxide in the brain. Forced expiration expels carbon dioxide from the blood stream by collapsing the lungs and pushing out carbon dioxide. So it’s impossible to sustain a long note, or sing a long phrase when your core muscles are shoving air out of your lungs as quickly as possible. Singing requires the exact opposite. The diaphragm contracts down and out to pull in air. Then you want to release air slowly to support the voice, meaning you want the diaphragm to remain engaged through isometric action, and the lungs naturally collapse because they’re empty. You don’t want active breathing to force air out quickly. That’ll ruin your singing. Secondly, active breathing occurs automatically during moments of strenuous activity and stress. It happens when your body is exhausted, strained, and tight. During forced expiration, your body breathes with quick gasps of air. The result is stress and anxiety that ruins your performance. Because instead of seeing the character you want to portray or the choices you’ve made, the audience sees someone who looks like he just ran a marathon and is struggling to breathe, who’s nervous, and possibly on the verge of fainting. So, active breathing is wrong for singers. The truth is you won’t need active breathing if you take the time instead to strengthen your diaphragm so it can support singing on its own.