
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Most singers think “support” begins and ends with breath control. Ask almost anyone on the street what good singing requires, and you’ll hear it: support your breath. But that answer, while not wrong, is incomplete.
In this episode of The Voice Science Podcast, we go far beyond breath management and introduce a critical—but often overlooked—dimension of vocal support: anchoring. Borrowed from Estill Voice Training, anchoring reveals how engaging larger muscles of the head, neck, torso, and even the lower body creates the stability necessary for precise, powerful, or even delicate singing.
You’ll learn:
Support isn’t “take a bigger breath.” It’s body-wide engagement used to free the voice.
By Josh Manuel | VoSciMost singers think “support” begins and ends with breath control. Ask almost anyone on the street what good singing requires, and you’ll hear it: support your breath. But that answer, while not wrong, is incomplete.
In this episode of The Voice Science Podcast, we go far beyond breath management and introduce a critical—but often overlooked—dimension of vocal support: anchoring. Borrowed from Estill Voice Training, anchoring reveals how engaging larger muscles of the head, neck, torso, and even the lower body creates the stability necessary for precise, powerful, or even delicate singing.
You’ll learn:
Support isn’t “take a bigger breath.” It’s body-wide engagement used to free the voice.