ANSWERS: 4
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Practice, I suppose. Practice makes perfect.
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It's not true that practice makes perfect; you might be practicing it wrong. Singing within your natural range will extend your range, and not trying something too hard for you at a young age is important. (A high school choir shouldn't attempt Handel's Messiah.) Enough voice lessons to learn what not to do are a good idea, and a lot of people have learned how to sing by joining a church choir. All that being said, however, there are natural limits. I know someone well who is an extremely accomplished musician who can sing anything and sing it on pitch, but it just doesn't sound that good because she hasn't got the vocal apparatus to sing beautifully.
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I'm not sure but if you find a way could you please let Victoria Beckham in on the secret ;D
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The best way is actually to learn singing technique. It will both help improve your natural abilities and will alleviate strain the untrained singer usually places on their voice with poor vocal technique. The first way to improve is to work on your stance. Standing straight but not rigid, feet shoulder width apart, knees slightly bent, back straight (think of each vertebrae lined up on top of one another in a perfect stack), head loose and as though it is being help up by a string through the back of your skull. Then work on breath. Breath Low so that every time you breath in you get fatter. From there learn techniques to develop vocal placement (in the head not the throat).
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