Plural Publishing produces leading academic, scientific and clinical publications in the fields of speech-language pathology, audiology, and otolaryngology.



Publication

Is Your Voice Telling on You?
How to Find and Use Your Natural Voice

Third Edition
Daniel R. Boone
Details:
328 pages, Illustrated (B/W), Softcover, 6 x 9" 1 lbs
ISBN13:
978-1-59756-801-2
Release Date:
10/07/2015
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$59.95

Overview

Is Your Voice Telling on You? How to Find and Use Your Natural Voice, Third Edition is designed to help the reader find and use his or her natural voice and appreciate the effect of emotions on voice. It is also a useful tool for both vocal coaches and speech-language pathologists who work with patients with voice disorders. The reader will find that some emotions heard in our voices, such as anger or fear, can be reduced or eliminated by making some simple vocal changes.

This user-friendly third edition includes self-tests and vocal exercises and addresses various topics: practical methods for increasing breath control with specific guidelines for increasing loudness and voice projection, voice management tips for women who have high demands on their voice, steps for increasing the friendliness of one's voice, exercises that increase voice efficiently with sharper voice focus, and biological and environmental tips to help professional voice users maintain optimal voicing under demanding conditions.

New features include:

  • Voice changes to hide negative emotions
  • Tips to increase the friendliness of one's voice
  • Techniques for a more masculine or feminine voice
  • Recommendations for recovering from the tired voice
  • Management practices for people who have high voice demands (such as teachers and sales people)
  • Ten steps for finding and keeping the voice you want and need

Reviews

  • Sean McCarther, DM, Assistant Professor Westminster Choir College (January 2016):
    "Like it or not, first impressions are a big deal. The way you look, the way you act, and even the way your voice sounds can make or break an interview or presentation. Daniel Boone’s new edition of Is Your Voice Telling on You is a wonderful guide to helping people realize the potential of their speaking voice. Each chapter presents the basic scientific underpinnings of vocal production in a clear and easy to follow manner. However, the most useful parts of the book are the diverse and incredibly practical exercises to promote change that end each chapter. Of equal importance to the technical advice is how to tie the voice to emotion and communication. Communication and expression is, after all, at the heart of all vocal use. This is a wonderful resource for anybody looking to strengthen or refine his/her speaking voice."

  • Helen Sjardin, VoicePrint (2016):
    "... The second edition of this book, published in 1997, was one of the most used books in my professional library for practical ideas and for lending to clients who wished to have some insight into what was behind the thinking of changes they wanted to make to their voice. It was, and remains very readable with simple diagrammatic illustrations, descriptive examples of things to practise and references to well-known characters (within an American context)... ...The information [in the third edition] remains relevant and accessible to anyone interested in the technical and functional aspects of voice. It continues to be one of my top ten resources for working with people with voice problems."

Preface

Chapter 1. Is Your Voice Telling on You?

Chapter 2. Basic Mechanisms Needed for a Normal Voice

Chapter 3. Enemies of a Natural Voice

Chapter 4. You and Your Natural Voice

Chapter 5. To Breathe or Not to Breathe

Chapter 6. Loud Enough or Too Loud?

Chapter 7. The Well-Aimed Pitch

Chapter 8. Is Your Voice in Focus?

Chapter 9. Talking Through Your Nose

Chapter 10. Your Emotions and Your Voice

Chapter 11. Stage Fright and Related Fears

Chapter 12. Your Voice on Phones and Other Electronic Gadgetry

Chapter 13. The Female Voice

Chapter 14. The Male Voice

Chapter 15. Ten Steps for Keeping Your Natural Voice

Chapter 16. Professional Help for Voice Problems

Suggested References
Index

About The Author

Daniel R. Boone

Daniel R. Boone, PhD, is a professor emeritus in the Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences at the University of Arizona. He has published 17 books and more than 100 other publications (chapters and articles) on voice and motor speech problems. He is revered nationally and internationally for his teaching and clinical activities as well as for his love and dedication to his students, and he is a household name to all who study speech pathology.

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