Speech pathology Vocal registers arise from different vibratory patterns produced by the vocal cords. Research by speech pathologists and some vocal pedagogists has revealed that the
vocal cords are capable of producing at least four distinct vibratory forms, although not all persons can produce all of them. The first of these vibratory forms is known as natural or normal voice;
Vocal pedagogy While speech pathologists and scholars of phonetics recognize four registers, vocal pedagogists are divided. Indiscriminate use of the term
register has led to confusion and controversy about the number of registers in the human voice within vocal pedagogical circles. This controversy does not exist within speech pathology and the other sciences, because vocal registers are viewed from a purely physiological standpoint concerned with laryngeal function. Writers concerned with the art of singing state that there are anywhere from one to seven registers present. The diversity of opinion is wide with no consensus. Vocal pedagogists teach that, with study, a singer can move effortlessly from one register to another with ease and consistent tone. Registers can even overlap while singing. Teachers who prefer the theory of "blending registers" usually help students through the "passage" from one register to another by hiding their "lift" (where the voice changes). However, many pedagogists disagree with this distinction of boundaries, blaming such breaks on vocal problems which have been created by a static laryngeal adjustment that does not permit the necessary changes to take place. This difference of opinion has affected the different views on vocal registration.
Chest voice and
head voice can be considered the simplest registers to differentiate between. However, there are other sounds, or
timbres, that a voice can make through physical changes in vocal fold vibrations and muscular changes in the laryngeal muscles. These timbres are known as glottal configurations and exist on a continuum that is more complex than singing purely in chest voice and head voice. A glottal configuration is the area in which the vocal folds come together when phonating. These configurations happen according to the intersection of two phenomena:
adduction and abduction of the
glottis (adduction when the posterior of the glottis is closed, and abduction is when it is open) and activation of the
thyroarytenoid muscle (activated for
chest, not activated for
falsetto). During adduction, the
interarytenoid muscle is engaged. ==Vocal fry register==