Have a question? Start with a guide
Start with the problem you are facing: pitch, breath, high notes, tone, vibrato, or song practice. Each guide explains the issue first, then gives a small drill you can try.
16 guides
Pitch
How to sing in tune
Singing out of tune is usually not a broken voice. It is a missing loop between reference pitch, listening, and vocal control. Use a piano target, verify with pitch tracking, then build stability through ear training and games.
how to sing in tunewhy do I sing off pitchonline pitch practice
Pitch Monitor · Piano · Echo · Ear Training · Pitch Bird
Warm-up
10-minute warm-up
A warm-up is not about singing louder. It is a gradual setup for breath, vocal-fold coordination, resonance, and pitch accuracy, starting light, short, and low-risk.
how to warm up voicewarm up before singingvocal warm-up routine
Piano · Pitch Monitor · Breath Racer · Resonance Radar
Breath
Breath support
Breath issues often show up as running out of air, falling endings, wobble, or a squeezed tone. Start by stabilizing short sustained notes before extending phrases.
how to train breath supportrunning out of breath singingshaky endings singing
Breath Racer · Pitch Monitor · Resonance Radar
High notes
High notes
High notes are not built by forcing harder. First find the highest note you can control today, then expand gradually by semitone or small interval steps.
how to sing high noteshow to expand vocal rangevoice cracks on high notes
Piano · Pitch Monitor · Breath Racer · Scale Ladder
Resonance
Clearer tone
A muffled tone often relates to mouth space, vowel shape, breath stability, and resonance strategy. The goal is not to shout brighter, but to find an easier clear tone.
muffled singing voicehow to make singing voice clearerresonance exercises
Resonance Radar · Breath Racer · Pitch Monitor
Vibrato
Vibrato practice
Vibrato is not just shaking the voice. First sustain a stable tone, then observe whether width and rate are even, and finally place it at phrase endings.
how to practice vibratounnatural vibrato singingvibrato width and rate
Vibrato Log · Pitch Monitor · Breath Racer
Song practice
Practice a song
When practicing a song, do not only sing it from top to bottom. First check whether the range fits, then isolate hard phrases, endings, breaths, and tone.
how to practice a songhow to choose a singing keyhow to practice chorus high notes
Piano · Pitch Monitor · Breath Racer · Resonance Radar · Vibrato Log
Pitch
Cents deviation
Cents measure distance between pitches. In 12-tone equal temperament, one semitone is 100 cents and one octave is 1200 cents. For singers, cents deviation shows whether you are sharp, flat, or falling at the end.
what does cents off pitch meanhow many cents is in tunehow to read pitch deviation
Pitch Monitor · Piano · Echo · Ear Training
Song key
Choose a song key
The original key may not fit your voice. To choose a key, first test the low notes, high notes, and longest phrases that tend to cause trouble, then decide whether to transpose up or down.
how to choose a singing keyhow to know if a song fits my voicewhen to transpose a song up or down
Piano · Pitch Monitor · Scale Ladder
Ear training
Ear training for singers
Ear training is not only for music students. For singers, the practical goal is to hear a note, short phrase, or interval and reproduce it accurately.
do singers need ear traininghow to train relative pitchwhat to do if I cannot hear pitch
Echo · Ear Training · Piano · Pitch Monitor
Karaoke
Karaoke pitch practice
In karaoke, common pitch problems are drifting flat with the backing track, missing chorus notes, and unstable endings. Practice away from the backing track first and turn hard phrases into short loops.
how to stop going flat in karaokekaraoke singing out of tunewhy do I sing flat
Pitch Monitor · Piano · Pitch Bird
Online practice
Online vocal tools
Online vocal tools do not replace a teacher. They make self-practice visible through reference notes, pitch curves, breath stability, resonance, and vibrato records.
can I practice singing online without installing appsfree online vocal trainingbrowser-based vocal practice
Pitch Monitor · Piano · Pitch Bird · Breath Racer · Resonance Radar · Vibrato Log · Echo · Ear Training · Scale Ladder
Endings
Falling endings
Falling endings can make an otherwise good phrase sound unsupported. They usually involve airflow release, target memory, and attention at the end of the phrase.
how to fix falling endingsunstable singing endingspitch drops at phrase end
Pitch Monitor · Breath Racer · Piano
High notes
Tight high notes
Throat tension on high notes often means the target is beyond today's controllable edge, or you are squeezing for pitch and volume. Lower the note first, then check breath and tone.
throat tight on high noteshigh notes feel squeezedhow to relax high notes
Breath Racer · Resonance Radar · Pitch Monitor · Piano
Routine
Daily practice routine
Daily vocal practice does not need to be long, but it needs a clear order: warm up lightly, train one core skill, then apply it to one phrase.
what to practice singing daily15-minute singing routinehow to structure vocal self-practice
Piano · Pitch Monitor · Breath Racer · Resonance Radar · Vibrato Log
Chorus
Chorus high notes
Chorus high notes are not only about the high note itself. Entry pitch, the previous breath, volume change, and ending all affect stability.
how to practice chorus high notescannot sing chorus high noteshigh note entry practice
Piano · Pitch Monitor · Breath Racer · Resonance Radar