Why Glissando Teaches Register Transitions Better
Stepwise scales (do-re-mi-fa) create discrete pitch events that allow you to mask register transitions. You can flip from chest to head voice between two notes and not notice the abruptness. A continuous glide removes this hiding place.
The siren octave uses portamento (sliding pitch) to expose every micro-adjustment your vocal folds make during the transition. You cannot jump over the break. You have to pass through it smoothly, which teaches your nervous system what coordinated blending feels like.
The Siren Pattern
Start on a comfortable low pitch and produce a sustained vowel sound (typically "ee" or "oo"). Slide upward in pitch continuously, like a siren, until you reach an octave above where you started. Then slide back down.
The slide should be seamless, with no jumps or breaks. If you flip suddenly from chest to head voice, slow down and try again, focusing on the exact moment where the flip occurs. That moment is your passaggio.
Feeling the Exact Moment of Register Change
As you glide upward, you will feel a transition point where chest voice begins to strain and head voice wants to take over. This is not a failure. This is the information you need. The siren reveals where your break is so you can learn to smooth it out.
You may feel this as a physical sensation in your larynx or as a change in where you feel vibration. Chest voice feels lower and heavier. Head voice feels lighter and higher in your face. The V-glide exercise builds this same head voice coordination through consonant-driven fold thinning that naturally prepares the lighter mechanism.
Removing the Step Between Registers
The goal is to make the transition imperceptible. Instead of a sudden flip (chest, chest, chest, FLIP, head, head), you want a gradual blend (chest, chest-leaning, mixed, head-leaning, head). The siren trains this incremental shift.
Cricothyroid engagement increases gradually as you ascend. Thyroarytenoid activity decreases gradually. The overlap creates the blend. Forcing one mechanism to dominate too long creates the flip.
Applying Smooth Transitions to Real Songs
Once you can siren smoothly through your break, try sustaining single pitches at various points in the octave. Then practice simple melodies that cross the passaggio. For adding nasal resonance to your falsetto work, the ng glide strengthens falsetto presence without adding modal voice weight. The coordination you build on the siren transfers to musical contexts, allowing you to sing through your break without audible shifts.