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Mum Octave: Mixed Voice with Lip Closure

Closed-mouth position naturally balances TA and CT muscle coordination for mixed voice. The mum octave trains that blend across your full octave span.

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

The Muscles of Mixed Voice

Mixed voice requires simultaneous activity from two opposing muscle groups: the thyroarytenoid (TA) muscles that thicken the vocal folds for chest voice, and the cricothyroid (CT) muscles that stretch and thin the folds for head voice.

In pure chest voice, TA dominates. In pure head voice, CT dominates. In mixed voice, both muscles work together in varying proportions. This co-contraction is what creates the blended sound.

Why Closed-Mouth Exercises Help Mixed Voice

When your lips are closed (as in the "mum" sound), you create a semi-occluded vocal tract. This increases back pressure on your vocal folds, making vibration more efficient and reducing the muscular effort required to maintain coordination.

The closure also limits how much subglottal pressure you can build. You cannot overblow air through closed lips, which means you cannot muscle your way through the passaggio with pure chest voice force. The exercise requires you to blend.

The Mum Octave Pattern

Start on a comfortable pitch in your lower-mid range and produce a sustained "mum" sound with your lips lightly touching. Sing an octave up and back down (do-re-mi-fa-sol-la-ti-do-ti-la-sol-fa-mi-re-do) on the mum sound.

As you cross through your passaggio (typically around mi-fa-sol in this pattern), focus on maintaining the same quality and effort level. Do not push harder or grip tighter. Let the mechanism shift naturally while the mum sound stays consistent.

Feeling the Balanced Coordination

You may feel chest voice yielding gradually as you ascend, with head voice coordination taking over more of the work. This handoff is the blend. In a well-coordinated mix, you should not be able to pinpoint exactly where chest ends and head begins.

If you feel a sudden flip or your voice cracks, you are not blending. You are switching abruptly. Practising ascending scales with drone for break stability can help you develop smoother coordination through that zone. Slow down, start lower in pitch, and focus on allowing the transition to happen gradually over several notes.

Opening to Vowels While Maintaining Mix

Once you can execute the mum octave smoothly, try the same pattern on an open vowel like "ah" or "oh." The coordination will feel less stable at first because you have removed the closed-mouth support, but the muscle memory you built on mum transfers.

The mum is training wheels. Eventually you remove them, but the balance you learned stays with you.

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Contrary Motion: Independent Mixed Voice Control

Contrary motion challenges ability to maintain mix while your melodic line changes direction. Advanced mixed voice coordination exercise.

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Parallel Thirds: Melodic Mixed Voice Training

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Straw Phonation: Back Pressure for Easier Mix

Semi-occlusion reduces effort required to maintain mix through your vocal break. Use straw phonation for effortless mixed voice.

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