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Episode: 3919
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Title: HPR3919: How I hacked my voice
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3919/hpr3919.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 17:19:39
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3919 for Thursday, 10 August 2023.
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Today's show is entitled, How I Hacked My Voice.
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It is the 50th show of Tukutura Oto, and is about 16 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is Tukutura Oto talks about what she is doing to change her voice.
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Hi, this is Tula Turto, and you are listening to the Hacker Public Radio.
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Today's episode, I'm not talking about the Haskell, surprise, surprise, but rather I'm
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talking about how I hacked my voice.
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If you have been listening to my episodes, you might have noticed that my voice has changed
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a little bit over the years.
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This episode will be about how I did that, what kind of things I did to achieve that.
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So, for the record, I used something like this, I'm reading out the weekdays in Finnish.
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Manantai, Tiistai, Keskiviku, Torstai, Periantai, Lautai, Sundantai.
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And nowadays, if I do the same thing, it sounds like Manantai, Tiistai, Keskiviku, Torstai,
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Periantai, Lautai, Sundantai.
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So, there is a noticeable sense in there.
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So, a whole process took, maybe a couple of years, I was doing it every day, but I wasn't
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doing exercises every day, but I was working with the voice more or less every day in
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some manner.
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So the first resource I looked into, like so many other people, because that is a very
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recommended resource, is the Transvoice Lessons channel in the YouTube, there will be a link
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in the show notes for that.
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And there, there's a lot of exercises, a lot of really interesting theory and science
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behind the voice, there's tons and tons of videos there.
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So I started with that, and basically the first thing, there's a
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I think three video series there that talked about very basic things, how to change
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your voice.
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So I started with figuring out what's the difference between chest voice and head voice.
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The problem with voice is that, or rather the challenge with the voice is that when we
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speak, we tend to speak very instinctively.
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We don't really think how all the muscles in our body are moving and how they produce
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the sound.
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We just do it.
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We learn that as a baby, and then we do it instinctively.
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We don't really think about that.
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So a lot of the theory was really tricky to get, because if it says that contract this
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specific muscle to change your voice like this, you have no idea what that muscle is.
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You might see a picture, but if you haven't trained that muscle, it's really hard to do
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anything with that muscle.
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You cannot just start doing that.
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But the exercises they had were easy in a way that they said that try to make sound
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like this and then try to make the sound like this, and you start mimicking those sounds.
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And from there, you learn to control all those muscles that change the voice, because
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the voice is produced by the vocal folds in your throat, and then it is amplified and
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shielded by the rest of your head, basically.
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So the chest and head voice, the chest voice, it has more, I think, the words are timbre.
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You can think, when you speak, you can sort of feel the voice coming from your abdomen
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or from your chest, and then you try to switch it to your, to come from your head.
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It really doesn't change the location where it comes from, but the feeling helps you to
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manage the voice production in a way that it switches to sounding differently.
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So instead of producing it in the tip of your body, you can do it like you produce
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a bowel and then try to move higher, so you go like, at the end, you add the head voice.
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And if you keep continuing to the higher, you end up with the falsetto that sounds very
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comical, and might be useful sometimes, but it's not very useful, very useful when speaking.
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And at that point, it helps if you are holding your finger on the larynx, and you can feel
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how it is moving.
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And then I started doing the exercise where I just tried to lift the larynx on my throat
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and give it up, because that changes the voice, because it shortens the distance of the
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voice, so it goes on the higher, higher sounding, of you mean in sounding.
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Because the thing is that while the pitch of your speech or voice has effect, if it's
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first served as a male or female, the actually the resonance has even bigger effect on that.
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And the transverse lessons talk about this a lot more detail, but basically it's not just
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just just a pitch, but also the resonance only. Only your voice that changes how it is perceived.
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So I was just trying to hold my larynx up, first with producing a sound and then just trying to
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hold it up without producing a sound, and basically just trying to keep it at high as long as
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possible and then letting it drop and then lifting it up, basically just like doing a muscle training
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with weights, because the muscles that move it weren't used to that, so they got fired very quickly,
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so I just had to train them to be stronger and regain control of moving the larynx.
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And at this point I switched using, I tried to use the new voice in everyday speech, and I was,
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I sounded really pretless and funny when I get it, but I just decided that it's the easiest if I don't
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if I don't do it only training 15 minutes a day or some amount of day, but try to keep doing that
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all the time, because then my body gets more used to it quicker. And one funny trick was that I was
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reading my social media feed aloud, and just reading it aloud, but people were posting and trying
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trying different voices for different people and just playing playing playing with the voice,
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seeing what works and what notes and what kind of things I can do, and because there was no
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releasening that, at least I hope nobody wasn't listening at that point, but it was a very
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low pressure and gave me an opportunity to play with the voice and see what I can do and how things
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affect to each other. Okay, and the next big improvement I figured I was told was adding a little
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bit of twang into my voice, and of course that's again, if somebody comes and says, hey,
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I just had better than more twang into your voice and it sounds better. You don't know what that
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means unless you have studied that stuff, but I had this coach actually told me that you can
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just pretend to be an old croaking witch who is speaking with a funny voice. That just
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helped me to realize what the twang is. So if I imitate a witch, it sounds like I am the evil
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witch, and that's a creaking is produced by the twang. Of course that point on adding it a lot
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more than I'm doing it now. I'm still doing it, but not at that high level, and there's a little
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slap in your throat that closes. It's basically a, you can imagine it's a select of it with your
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windpipe and with your digestive track. So when you are speaking, you're speaking
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from the feedback, but when you are drinking or eating that slap moves and directs the
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content into your stomach and you can control that slap. If you close it a lot, you get a creaking
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sound, but if you close it just a little bit, you actually get a clearer and more strong sound,
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like voice that carries a longer distance, and doing that witch impersonation,
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I was doing that and then I was feeding a weekdays, and then I was just doing the vowels, like
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yeah, yeah, yeah, just doing the vowels and training to control that little aspect, and
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basically, again, strengthening the muscles and learning how to use that. And now that I have some
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idea how that works, I can add it just a little bit when I'm speaking normally, and if I'm speaking
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in a place where there's a lot of noise, or there's a lot of people so that I have to have a voice
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that carries a further away, then I can add it a little more. It still sounds natural. I'm not going
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to do it here, because it actually gets quite loud, and might hurt your ears, but anyway,
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that having the control of that means that I can move on the scale, like note rang or a lot of
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sang, or even a witch impersonation. And another thing, I don't actually know how it works very
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effectively, is that the coach said that you can pretend that you are smiling, you don't actually
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have to smile, but you just have pretending to think of, like she was talking about inner smile,
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it sounds really silly, but it works, you can do it first, you smile very widely, and that changes
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again your voice, because of course the smiling changes how your face looks like it changes the
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oral cavity, in shape of the oral cavity, and that changes how the, how your voice is filtered and
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amplified, and that of course directly affects to how you sound like. So that was the second thing,
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or third thing, and these three things basically is what I learned to do, and it changed my voice
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quite a bit, as you can hear. Okay, and then I have the problem that my voice gets tired,
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eventually, if I talk about, talk a long time, it gets tired, it gets
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scratchy and raspy in my throat, so I asked about how to do, what to do about this, and
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the coach gave me couple of simple tricks that I can use, first the most important is staying
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hydrated, you have to, I have to drink enough over course of the day, because if I
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are not drinking enough water, it directly shows how I sound like. The second one is that
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using the resonator tube, it's funny, it's about 20 centimeters long metal pipe, or thin tube,
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about the size of a pencil basically, that I, the other one end is placed into the water, and I'm
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making a oval sound from the other end, and so it's just going up and down the skills,
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and the water adds the back pressure, and somehow that calibrates how my voice sounds, it's
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it's fascinating, I was quite skeptical, but after trying that out, it noticed that it really,
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it really works, and the third one is, because it's hard to carry the cup of water, and the
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metal tube with you all the time, is just doing the r sound, and just going up and down on the
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scales, like just, and that has the similar effect, it's not as strong, but it's strong enough,
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okay, and that's that's basically all the tricks that I have run to change my voice,
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in the transport lessons there's a lot more things that you can do, but a lot of those are quite
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quite a bit more involving and requiring more practice, and I have to say that I'm too lazy to
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do those consistently, or even figure out how those works, maybe I get to pack those at some point,
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but currently I'm quite happy how I sound like, so that's how I hacked my voice, so if you have
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questions, comments or feedback, leave a comment in there, comment field, comment box whatever,
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or even better, record your own episode, you can also email me at www.touradouttouradwalktider.net,
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that's all for today,
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you have been listening to Hacker Public Radio, at Hacker Public Radio, does work,
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today's show was contributed by a hbrl listener like yourself, if you ever thought of recording
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podcast, and click on our contribute link to find out how easy it leads, hosting for hbr has been
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kindly provided by an onsthos.com, the internet archive and our synch.net, on the Sadois Stated,
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today's show is released under a Creative Commons, attribution 4.0 international license,
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