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Glottal Repeats: Strengthen Chest Voice Closure

Glottal repeats build vocal fold closure stamina for sustained chest voice singing. Strengthen your lower register with this exercise.

Chest Voice Exercises|February 8, 2026|2 min read

Vocal Fold Closure and Chest Voice

Chest voice requires firm vocal fold closure to produce its characteristic full, rich tone. The thyroarytenoid muscles contract, thickening the folds and creating the mass needed for lower-frequency vibration.

Weak closure results in breathiness. Excessive closure creates tension. Humming exercises teach effortless projection through a gentler path to closure awareness. The glottal repeats exercise builds stamina for sustained, balanced closure without strain.

The Glottal Repeats Exercise

Choose a single pitch in your comfortable chest voice range. Sing rapid repeated notes on that pitch, like "ah-ah-ah-ah-ah," with each repetition starting from a brief moment of silence.

Each note requires your vocal folds to close, vibrate, release, and close again. This rapid cycling builds the muscular coordination needed to maintain closure over long phrases.

Building Stamina Without Strain

Start with short bursts of 5-8 repeats at a moderate tempo. As you build stamina, increase the number of repetitions and the speed. Your throat should never feel tight or strained. If it does, reduce the tempo or take a break.

The goal is efficient closure, not forceful closure. Your vocal folds should come together with just enough tension to vibrate cleanly. Over-muscling creates fatigue and limits your endurance.

Preventing Breathiness in Long Phrases

Singers who start phrases with clear tone but finish breathy typically lack closure stamina. Their vocal folds fatigue and begin to gap, allowing air to escape without vibrating. This exercise directly addresses that weakness.

By training rapid closure cycles, you build the endurance to maintain fold contact throughout sustained singing. Your low notes stay clear and supported even at the end of long phrases.

From Exercise to Performance

Once you can execute glottal repeats comfortably at various tempos and pitches, your chest voice will feel more solid and reliable in actual songs. Passages that previously caused you to go breathy will stay connected and clear.

The coordination is transferable. Humming exercises for baritone warmth apply this same closure stamina in a range-specific way. Your vocal folds learn to maintain closure without conscious effort, freeing your attention for musicality and expression.

Try It Now

q

Vocal Driller

100bpm
C4key
ladder
C3rangeC5
100bpm
MLDY
CHRD
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More in Chest Voice Exercises

Descending 5-Tone: Strengthen Lower Chest Voice

The descending 5-tone pattern emphasizes lower range where chest voice can be weak and breathy. Build low note clarity and power.

Pulse on F: Build Chest Voice Breath Support

Breathy chest voice usually means weak breath support. Pulse on F trains your diaphragm to hold steady air pressure so your chest register stays connected.

Staccato Ha-Ha: Chest Voice Clarity and Attack

Staccato ha-ha drills train clean glottal onset so your chest voice notes start crisp, not breathy. Fix weak, airy attacks in your low range.

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Vocal Sigh: Release Chest Voice Tension

The vocal sigh resets vocal folds after pushing chest voice. Use descending sighs to prevent fatigue and release tension.

Z Scale: Chest Voice Resonance and Range

The z-scale adds resonance to chest voice while safely extending your range upward. Build power without pushing or shouting.

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