Myth #3
More muscle equals more power (for singing).FALSE!
A common misunderstanding is that more muscle equals more power. It really depends upon the situation. Of course there are some situations, such as weightlifting, where more muscle DOES mean more power. But then again, in our cases with singing, more muscle does NOT mean more power.
Have you ever been golfing? Some may have, some may have not. But you get the point... you swing a club at a small ball standing on a tee in the ground. You see golfers hit those balls pretty far huh? I bet the stronger they are, the farther they can hit...right? Wrong! If you put the golf club in the hands of a huge bodybuilder, they would not be able to hit farther than Tiger Woods. The foundation of the skill is technique, not strength.
I know this from first-hand experience. Have you ever seen "Happy Gilmore" with Adam Sandler? If not, he is a golfer that finds success in the sport by swinging his club like a baseball bat and hitting it REALLY far. Well it is a movie, so count that out!
Well when I was a kid out at the driving range I would have the same idea. I would swing as hard as I could in hope to smash the ball all the way down the field. I had no luck. I was very inconsistent and the ball would fly all over the place. Then I look over at the people next to me and they would swing so smoothly with half the effort as me, but their ball would soar out of sight! Hmm... it makes so much sense that more muscle equals more power, but it just isn't always true.
It is a common misunderstanding to assume that singing higher requires more muscle support, but that is NOT true. Using extra muscle actually does the complete opposite and holds you back! Think of it like this: you are at the gym lifting weights. You get to the point where you are lifting weights that are a little too heavy for you so you call a friend over to help you out... because more muscle means more power, right?. Well lets say as you start to lift those heavy weights your friend pushes AGAINST your power. It just makes it twice as hard! You call for extra muscle thinking it will help, but it backfires and does the complete opposite. So when you are singing and feel like you can't go much higher, you start to use extra muscle support but those muscles are doing the opposite as to what you want them to do! Those extra muscles cause strain and constrict your voice which puts a ceiling on your range.
