Why Intervals Challenge Mixed Voice More Than Scales
Stepwise scales (do-re-mi) allow your vocal mechanism to adjust incrementally as pitch changes. You have time to blend gradually. Interval leaps (do-sol) remove that luxury. Your vocal folds must reorganize quickly to accommodate a larger pitch change.
This stress-tests your mixed voice coordination. If your blend is fragile or inconsistent, interval leaps will expose it. You will flip into head voice, crack, or strain trying to push chest voice too high.
The Fifth Slide
Start on a comfortable pitch in your lower-mid range. Slide upward a perfect fifth (do to sol), then slide back down. The slide should be continuous (portamento), not a jump.
Repeat this pattern at progressively higher starting pitches until you are sliding through your passaggio. The challenge is maintaining smooth coordination across a five-note span that crosses your register break.
Maintaining Blend Through Leaps
As you slide upward a fifth, you will feel chest voice wanting to dominate at the bottom and head voice wanting to take over at the top. Your job is to keep both mechanisms engaged throughout the entire interval.
This is harder than it sounds. Your nervous system wants to simplify by using one mechanism at a time. Mixed voice requires you to override that default and maintain co-contraction of both TA and CT muscles across the leap.
Common Mistakes
Flipping. If you start in chest voice and suddenly flip to head voice mid-slide, you lost the blend. Slow down and focus on gradual transition.
Forcing. If you push chest voice all the way to the top of the fifth, you are not mixing. You are pulling chest voice higher than it wants to go. This creates strain and will eventually fail as you go higher.
Building Interval Confidence in Mixed Voice
Once you can execute fifth slides smoothly through your passaggio, try larger intervals (sixths, octaves) or faster slides. The coordination you build here transfers directly to songs with wide melodic leaps.
Ballads and contemporary pop songs frequently feature intervals that cross the passaggio. The fifth slide trains you to navigate these leaps without breaking or straining. For an even more supported approach, lip trills to heal voice cracks use semi-occlusion to smooth the same transition zone with less effort.