Vocal Coaching FAQ
Answers About Singing, Voice Training, and Technique
Not sure where to start? Here are the most common doubts and misconceptions I hear from students — and how to approach them with clarity and confidence.
Author: Tiziana Tinti
Every word you read here was written from experience, not borrowed. These are the foundations I live and teach by.
RECENTLY ADDED
If it feels too easy, it might not be helping. Train smart by understanding the real purpose behind every vocal exercise.
AI is transforming how we think about singing — and it can feel threatening. But what if it’s not the enemy? What if it’s actually a chance to let go of something we never truly needed?
Starting Your Journey
What if not knowing how to sing is exactly where you’re supposed to start?
Your age doesn’t decide when your voice can grow — your decision does.
A “bad” voice might not be bad at all — just untrained.
Good singing isn’t something you’re born with — it’s something you build.
Voice Training: What You Can Truly Expect
If it feels too easy, it might not be helping. Train smart by understanding the real purpose behind every vocal exercise.
You’ve worked. You’ve tried.
Maybe you just haven’t been taught the way you needed…
If magic exercises worked for everyone, no one would need real teachers.
So where’s the trick?
Pitch correctors like Autotune can — by definition — fix a pitch — but they can’t create a good singer.
Singing well is a great beginning — and it’s worth exploring how far your voice can go.
Healthy technique keeps great voices growing strong.
Worried about losing your uniqueness?
Protecting your vocal identity doesn’t mean avoiding growth.
It means learning how to find it and shape it your own way — with many more tools at your disposal.
Vocal Potential
AI is transforming how we think about singing — and it can feel threatening. But what if it’s not the enemy? What if it’s actually a chance to let go of something we never truly needed?
What feels “natural” isn’t necessarily your true voice — just the voice you’re most used to.
But being used to something doesn’t mean it’s the best you can be.
Being labeled “alto” or “bass” might have made you believe in limits you never really had.
Don’t trust the label — trust what you can build, with the right guidance behind you.
Progress looks different for everyone — but it should feel like movement, not a standstill.
It’s not about how much time you’ve spent — but about how much you’re really moving forward.