What Is Head Voice?
Head voice refers to the upper register where your vocal folds thin and stretch, creating a lighter but still connected sound. Unlike falsetto, head voice maintains vocal fold closure through the entire vibratory cycle, producing a fuller tone with more harmonic content.
The challenge is accessing this coordination without forcing chest voice higher or flipping into breathy falsetto. The head voice hoot removes performance anxiety by using a silly, non-musical sound that naturally guides your folds into the right configuration.
Why Owl Sounds Work
When you make a hoot sound (like "oo"), the rounded lips and narrow mouth shape create acoustic conditions that favor higher frequencies. The vocal tract acts as a resonant tube, filtering out lower harmonics and amplifying the partials that exist in head voice production.
This is physiological. The formant structure of an "oo" vowel naturally aligns with the thinner, more stretched vocal fold configuration needed for head voice. You can stumble into the coordination by accident simply because the sound itself guides you there.
The Hoot Pattern
Start on a comfortable mid-range pitch and make a sustained "hoo" sound, like an owl. Let the sound be breathy and light at first. Then slide upward in pitch while maintaining the hoot quality.
As you ascend, you will feel a shift in vibration. Chest voice typically creates strong vibrations in your sternum and throat. Head voice feels lighter, with sensations higher in your face or skull. This shift is the mechanism change you are learning to control.
Head Voice vs. Falsetto
Falsetto feels disconnected and breathy. Head voice feels more solid, even though it is lighter than chest voice. If your hoot sounds thin and airy with no buzzing sensation, you are in falsetto. Add slightly more breath pressure and aim for a slight ping or ring in the sound.
The difference lies in cricothyroid dominance versus complete thyroarytenoid release. Head voice maintains some fold contact. Falsetto allows the folds to vibrate with minimal closure, producing that characteristic breathiness.
Progressing to Musical Singing
Once you can reliably produce hoots in your upper range, try sustaining a single pitch without the slide. Then experiment with simple melodies on the hoot sound before transitioning to more open vowels like "ah" or "ay."
Mezzos face a specific challenge with this transition, since their passaggio sits between F4 and G#4 in a zone where contemporary repertoire places melodic climaxes. The hoot is training wheels. You will eventually remove them, but the coordination you build here transfers directly to sung head voice.