Breathy Chest Voice
Many singers struggle with weak, airy chest voice because their vocal folds do not achieve full closure at the start of each note. Instead of a clean attack, they get an "h" sound before the pitch stabilizes. This wastes air and reduces tonal clarity.
The staccato ha-ha exercise trains balanced glottal onset, where your vocal folds close simultaneously with the arrival of airflow. This creates a crisp, clear start to each note without harshness or breathiness.
Glottal Onset vs. Breathy Onset
Breathy onset starts with airflow before vocal fold closure. You hear "hhhhaaaa" instead of "ha."
Glottal onset starts with vocal fold closure simultaneous with or slightly before airflow. You hear a clean "ha" with no aspirated h sound.
Hard glottal attack starts with vocal fold closure before airflow, creating a sharp, clicked sound. This is typically too aggressive for healthy singing.
The staccato ha-ha aims for balanced onset, the middle path between breathy and hard.
The Ha-Ha Pattern
Choose a comfortable pitch in your chest voice range. Sing short, detached "ha" sounds on that pitch, like quick laughs. Each ha should start cleanly with no h sound before the vowel.
Your abdominal muscles should engage briefly with each staccato note, providing a small burst of support — the same coordination that glottal exercises build for belt mechanism strength. The vocal folds close in sync with that breath pulse.
Building Clarity Without Harsh Attack
Clean onset does not mean violent onset. Your vocal folds should come together gently but completely. If you feel a clicking sensation in your throat or any discomfort, you are over-closing (hard glottal attack).
Think of the folds touching like a door closing softly versus slamming shut. Both achieve closure, but one is sustainable and healthy.
Musical Applications for Clean Chest Voice
Pop, musical theater, and contemporary Christian music all rely on clear chest voice attacks. Breathy starts sound weak and amateur. Harsh attacks sound strained and can damage your voice over time.
The staccato ha-ha trains the coordination you need for professional-sounding chest voice in any genre that requires clarity and presence. As you advance, contrary motion exercises for independent mixed voice build on this foundation to extend your chest voice into mix.